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Vol. 56, Issue 3, 507-514, September 1999
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Medicinal Toxicology
Research Center, College of Medicine, Inha University, Inchon, Korea
Effects of excessive nitric oxide (NO) produced in vivo by an i.p.
injection of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) on hepatic microsomal
drug oxidation catalyzed by flavin-containing monooxygenase (FMO) were
determined. At 6 and 24 h after the LPS injection, liver
microsomes were isolated and FMO activities were determined by using
FMO substrates like thiobenzamide, trimethylamine,
N,N-dimethylaniline, and imipramine. Liver microsomal
FMO activities of LPS-treated rats were decreased significantly for all
these substrates. Microsomal content of FMO1 (the major form in rat
liver) in LPS-treated rats as determined by immunoblotting, was
severely decreased as well. In support of this, hepatic content of FMO1
mRNA was decreased by 43.6 to 67.3%. However, the hepatic content of
inducible NO synthase (iNOS) mRNA was increased by 2.6- to 5.4-fold and
the plasma nitrite/nitrate concentration was increased by about
30-fold in the LPS-treated rats. When this overproduction of NO in the LPS-treated rats was inhibited in vivo by a single or repeat doses of
either a general NOS inhibitor
NG-nitro-L-arginine or a
specific iNOS inhibitor aminoguanidine, the FMO1 mRNA levels were not
severely depressed (70
85% of the control level). Attendant with the
reduction of plasma nitrite/nitrate concentration by single and
repeated doses of NOS inhibitors, activity and content of FMO1 in liver
microsomes isolated from these NOS inhibitor cotreated rats were
restored partially (in single-dose inhibitors) or completely (in repeat
doses). In contrast to these NO-mediated in vivo suppressive effects on
the mRNA and enzyme contents of FMO1 as well as the FMO activity, the
NO generated in vitro from sodium nitroprusside did not inhibit the FMO
activities present in microsomes of rat and rabbit liver as well as
those present in rabbit kidney and lung. Combined, the excessive NO produced in vivo (caused by the LPS-dependent induction of iNOS) suppresses the FMO1 mRNA and enzyme contents as well as the FMO activities without any direct in vitro effect on the activities of
premade FMO enzyme. These findings suggest that NO is an important mediator involved in the suppression of FMO1 activity in vivo. Thus,
together with the previously reported suppression on the cytochrome
P-450 activities, the overproduced NO in the liver caused by induction
of iNOS under conditions of endotoxemia or sepsis suppresses FMO and
appears to be responsible for the decreased drug oxidation function
observed generally under conditions of systemic bacterial or viral infections.
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E. T. Morgan, V. Ullrich, A. Daiber, P. Schmidt, N. Takaya, H. Shoun, J. C. McGiff, A. Oyekan, C. J. Hanke, W. B. Campbell, et al. Cytochromes P450 and Flavin Monooxygenases---Targets and Sources of Nitric Oxide Drug Metab. Dispos., November 1, 2001; 29(11): 1366 - 1376. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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