Abstract

The effects of bezafibrate on hepatic peroxisome-associated enzymes of rats, mice, guinea pigs, hamsters, rabbits, dogs and monkeys were examined. Dogs and monkeys were given bezafibrate orally at 30 mg/kg body wt daily for 2 weeks and at 125 mg/kg body wt daily for 13 weeks, respectively, and other species at 100 mg/kg daily for 2 weeks. In male rats, marked changes were observed in the activities of catalase (1.73-fold), d-amino acid oxidase (DAAO; 0.56-fold), fatty acyl-CoA oxidizing system (FAOS; 12.9-fold) and carnitine acetyltransferase (CAT; 35.8-fold); in female rats, the changes were less than in the males. In mice, there were no apparent sex differences in the responses of hepatic peroxisomal enzymes to bezafibrate and the increases in the activities of catalase, FAOS and CAT were 1.76-, 3.75- and 7.94-fold respectively. In guinea pigs, only slight increases in the activities of FAOS (3.00-fold) and CAT (2.83-fold) were observed. In hamsters, the increases in catalase, FAOS and CAT activities, were 1.23-, 2.19- and 2.77-fold respectively. Although rabbits and dogs showed slight increases in CAT activity, no significant response to the drug was observed in monkeys. Hepatomegaly and the increase of hepatic content of peroxisome proliferation-associated polypeptide (PPA-80), which has been recognized as a peroxisomal bifunctional protein in the fatty acid β-oxidation pathway, were observed only in rats and mice. These results show that there were marked species differences in the effects of bezafibrate on hepatic peroxisomes, and that bezafibrate induced hepatic peroxisome proliferation in rodents, especially rats and mice.

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