Abstract

Nitrosamine-induced hepatocarcinogenesis has been used to investigate the regulation and expression of different drug-metabolizing enzymes in preneoplastic and neoplastic lesions in the female Wistar rat. The enzymes investigated were two phenobarbital-inducible cytochrome P-450 (cyt. P-450) isoenzymes (PB1 and PB2, mol. wt. 52 000 and 53 500, respectively), two 3-methylcholanthrene-inducible forms (MC1 and MC2, mol. wt. 54 500 and 57 000, respectively), NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase, the cytosolic glutathione transferases (GSTs) B and C and the microsomal epoxide hydrolase with broad substrate specificity (mEHb). Carcinogen-induced lesions were identified by use of the known markers of hepatocarcinogenesis adenosinetriphosphatase and gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase. While the GSTs and mEHb were increased in all preneoplastic and neoplastic lesions, the levels of the individual cyt. P-450 isoenzymes were characteristically different from each other. In many of the early ATPase deficient islets PB1 was elevated, whereas the content of the other cyt. P-450 forms and NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase was either unchanged or slightly lowered. At later stages of hepatocarcinogenesis PB1 returned to the levels of the surrounding tissue, while the other cyt. P-450 isoenzymes were decreased, the most prominent reduction being found in MC1. In neoplastic nodules all the cyt. P-450s and NADPH-cyt. P-450 reductase were diminished, some of them dramatically. These findings indicate that in spite of a common response of groups of P-450s to inducing agents, individual P-450 isoenzymes are also regulated separately. Moreover, the constant elevation of mEHb and GSTs in all lesions investigated in this study demonstrates that these enzymes, which are largely involved in deactivation, are regulated in a different fashion from the predominantly carcinogen-activating monooxygenases. The observed differences in enzyme pattern may provide a useful method for subdividing and categorizing preneoplastic and neoplastic lesions.

Full Text
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