Abstract

1. The long-term maintenance of metabolism of representative drugs and steroid hormone substrates by cytochromes P-450, and their inducibility, was investigated in primary cultures of adult rat hepatocytes. Collagenase-isolated cells were seeded on collagen-coated tissue culture dishes and cultured in Chee's essential media in the presence or absence of phenobarbital (PB, 0.75 mM, 96 h or continuously) and 3-methylcholanthrene (MC, 5 microM, 48 h) for up to 45 days. 2. Hepatic P-450-dependent metabolism of diazepam to its primary oxidized metabolite was inducible by PB both in vivo (monitored in isolated liver microsomes) and in cultured cells (up to 100% and 400% increases in the formation of temazepam and nordiazepam, respectively, after 25 days in culture). Hepatocyte microsomal androstenedione 16 beta-hydroxylase activity was also induced by PB treatment of the hepatocytes (350-650% increase in 20-day-old cells). 3. Western blot analysis revealed that immunoreactive P-450 form PB-4 (IIB1), which catalysed the N-demethylation of diazepam to yield nordiazepam as well as androstenedione 16 beta-hydroxylation when assayed in a purified enzyme system, was substantially elevated following PB treatment of the cultured cells. Similarly, MC induced 7-ethoxycoumarin O-deethylase activity (up to 2000% increase from 5 to 45 days) as well as immunoreactive P-450c (IA1) in the hepatocyte cultures. 4. These studies demonstrate that cytochrome P-450 activities can be maintained, and also induced, after extended periods of time in hepatocytes cultured using a simple collagen mixture as substrate and a commercially available tissue culture media. This culture system should provide an important tool for further studies of P-450-dependent xenobiotic metabolism in a well-defined, liver-derived cellular system.

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