Uroporphyria induced by 5-aminolaevulinic acid alone in Ahr(d) SWR mice

被引:23
作者
Constantin, D [1 ]
Francis, JE [1 ]
Akhtar, RA [1 ]
Clothier, B [1 ]
Smith, AG [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV LEICESTER,MRC,TOXICOL UNIT,LEICESTER LE1 9HN,LEICS,ENGLAND
关键词
5-aminolaevulinic acid; uroporphyria; mice; genetic variation;
D O I
10.1016/S0006-2952(96)00475-3
中图分类号
R9 [药学];
学科分类号
1007 ;
摘要
In mice, depression of hepatic uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase (UROD) leading to porphyrin accumulation (uroporphyria) occurs with chlorinated ligands of the aryl hydrocarbon (AH) receptor especially after iron overload. However, in the absence of chlorinated ligands, iron itself will eventually cause uroporphyria, but this response is not associated with the Ahr genotype. These effects are potentiated by administration of the haem precursor 5-aminolaevulinate (ALA). The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of ALA alone. Prolonged administration of 2 mg ALA/mL in the drinking water to SWR mice also led to decarboxylase insufficiency (11% of control) and uroporphyria by 8 weeks, whereas DBA/2 mice did not show reduced enzyme activity. Both strains are considered AH nonresponsive and analysis of the Ahr gene using restriction fragment length polymorphism was consistent with SWR, like DBA/2, possessing the Ahr(d) allele. Exposure of isolated hepatocytes to ALA (150-500 mu M) for up to 48 hr showed a significant accumulation of both uroporphyrin and coproporphyrin in the medium, which for uroporphyrin particularly was significantly greater with SWR than with DBA/2 cells. Basal in vivo CYP1A2 activity, measured as microsomal methoxyresorufin dealkylation, was significantly greater in SWR than in DBA/2 mice (1.3-fold), but it was unclear whether this was sufficient to explain the marked difference in sensitivities of the two strains. Despite SWR mice being AH nonresponsive, uroporphyria and decarboxylase depression after an initial iron overload and ALA for 3 weeks were greatly potentiated by a single dose (100 mg/kg) of hexachlorobenzene (a weak AH ligand). The results demonstrate that there is a genetic difference in mice independent of the Ahr genotype and response to iron, which influences the susceptibility to ALA-induced uroporphyria. Thus chemicals, iron and ALA can act independently, but also together, to cause porphyria in susceptible individuals. Copyright (C) 1996 Elsevier Science Inc.
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页码:1407 / 1413
页数:7
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