Abstract
Sorbitol and ethanol were shown to have opposite effects on p-nitroanisole O-demethylation in perfused livers from fasted, phenobarbital-treated rats. Sorbitol (2 mM) stimulated drug metabolism by 50% while ethanol (20 mM) caused 80% inhibition. Both sorbitol and ethanol infusion decreased the NAD +/NADH ratio and increased fluorescence of pyridine nucleotides monitored from the liver surface; however, the NADP +/NADPH ratio was decreased by sorbitol but tended to be increased by ethanol. Stimulation of drug metabolism by sorbitol was abolished by pretreatment of fasted rats with 6-aminonicotinamide, an inhibitor of the pentose phosphate shunt, but was not affected by aminooxyacetate, a transaminase inhibitor. These results indicate that sorbitol stimulated p-nitroanisole metabolism by providing NADPH via the pentose phosphate shunt. Ethanol and sorbitol caused changes in intracellular concentrations of NADPH in livers from fasted rats which correlated directly with changes in hepatic levels of citrate and aspartate. Furthermore, aspartate infusion reduced the inhibition of p-nitroanisole O-demethylation by ethanol. This inhibition was also reversed partially by sorbitol in livers from 6-aminonicotinamide-treated rats. It is concluded that ethanol inhibits mixed-function oxidation primarily by decreasing the concentrations of citric acid cycle intermediates which leads to depletion of cytosolic NADPH.
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