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© 1996 Oxford University Press

research-article

In Vitro and in Vivo Ultrastructural Changes Induced by Macrolide Antibiotic LY281389

J. W. HORN, C. B. JENSEN, S. L. WHITE, D. A. LASKA, M. N. NOVILLA, D. D. GIERA and D. M. HOOVER

Toxicology Research Laboratories, Lilly Research Laboratories, A Division of Eli Lilly and Company Greenfield, Indiana 46140-2517

Received August 31, 1995; accepted April 26, 1996

High doses of LY281389 (9-N-(n-propyl)-erythromycylamine) cause cytoplasmic vacuolar changes in striated and smooth muscle characteristic of drug-induced phospholipidosis. This study characterized phospholipidosis in striated and smooth muscle of rats and dogs, compared in vivo observations with those in a cultured rat myoblast model, and attempted to confirm the lysosomal origin of the drug-induced vacuoles. Standard transmission electron microscopy and acid phosphatase cytochemistry techniques were used to evaluate ultrastructural changes in vivo and in vitro. Rats and dogs exposed to LY281389 had a time-and dose-related increase in number and size of vacuoles containing concentric lamellar figures in cardiac and skeletal muscle. Cytochemical staining of dog stomach smooth muscle for acid phosphatase, a lysosomal enzyme, stained the periphery of vacuoles that contained concentric lamellar figures. Cultured rat L6 myoblast cells were exposed to 0.25 mg LY281389/m1 for 2.5, 5, 10, 20, 30, or 90 min and 2, 6, 12, 24, or 48 hr. Cell cultures exposed for 2 hr had several predominantly large, clear, membrane-bound vacuoles, and at 6 and 12 hr there were greater numbers of large vacuoles that contained increased amounts of membranous figures. Following 24- or 48-hr exposures, vacuoles occupied most of the cytoplasmic volume, and were engorged predominantly with amorphous or granular material. These findings indicate that LY281389 can induce similar phospholipidosis-like vacuolar changes in rat and dog muscle and in a cultured rat muscle cell line. Further, positive acid phosphatase staining of drug-induced vacuolar structures, in conjunction with standard transmission electron microscopy techniques, strongly suggests that vacuoles seen in vitro and in vivo are lysosomal in origin.


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