Abstract
Prednisone, prednisolone, and methylprednisolone are currently administered in association with cyclosporin A in the postoperative treatment of transplant patients. The aim of this work was to evaluate the effects of these corticosteroids on the expression of several forms of cytochromes P450 (P450), including P450 1A2, 2D6, 2E1, and 3A, and on cyclosporin A oxidase activity in human liver. For this purpose, human hepatocytes prepared from lobectomies were maintained in culture in a serum-free medium, in collagen-coated dishes, for 96-144 hr, in the absence or presence of 50-100 microM corticosteroids, rifampicin, or dexamethasone. To mimic more closely the current clinical protocol, hepatocyte cultures were also co-treated with corticosteroids and cyclosporin A or ketoconazole (a selective inhibitor of P450 3A). Cyclosporin A oxidase activity, intracellular retention of cyclosporin A oxidized metabolites within hepatocytes, accumulation of P450 proteins and corresponding messages, and de novo synthesis and half-lives of these P450 were measured in parallel in these cultures. Our results, obtained from seven different hepatocyte cultures, showed that 1) dexamethasone and prednisone, but not prednisolone or methylprednisolone, were inducers of P450 3A, at the level of protein and mRNA accumulation, as well as of cyclosporin A oxidase activity, known to be predominantly catalyzed by these P450; 2) although corticosteroids are known to be metabolized in human liver, notably by P450 3A, partial or total inhibition of this P450 by cyclosporin or ketoconazole, respectively, did not affect the inducing efficiency of these molecules; 3) corticosteroids did not affect the half-life of P450 3A or the accumulation of other forms of P450, including 1A2, 2D6, and 2E1; 4) chronic treatment of cells with cyclosporin did not affect P450 3A accumulation; 5) corticosteroids were all competitive inhibitors of cyclosporin A oxidase in human liver microsomes, with Ki values of 61 +/- 12, 125 +/- 25, 190 +/- 38, and 210 +/- 42 microM for dexamethasone, prednisolone, prednisone, and methylprednisolone, respectively; and 6) chronic treatment of cells with corticosteroids did not influence the excretion of oxidized metabolites of cyclosporin from the cells. These results support most of clinical reports dealing with mutual interactions between cyclosporin A and corticosteroids.