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© 1987 Oxford University Press

research-article

In Vivo Interactions of Aluminum with Hepatic Cytochrome P-450 and Metallothionein1

E. H. JEFFERY*,{dagger},2, H. T. JANSEN{dagger} and J. A. DELLINGER{dagger}

*Institute for Environmental Studies, University of Illinois Urbana, Illinois 61801 {dagger}Department of Veterinary Biosciences, University of Illinois Urbana, Illinois 61801

In Vivo Interactions of Aluminum with Hepatic Cytochrome P-450 and Metallothionein. JEFFERY, E. H., JANSEN, H. T., AND DELLINGER, J. A. (1987). Fundam. Appl. Toxicol. 8, 541–548. Male Sprague–Dawley rats (three per treatment group) were administered 0, 2, 10, 20, or 40 mg aluminum per kilogram ip per day for 3 days as aluminum chloride in saline. Animals were killed 24 hr later. Aluminum was found to inhibit hepatic drug metabolism in a dose-dependent fashion. The lowest dose (2 mg or 75 µmol/kg) had no effect on the parameters measured, whereas the highest dose (40 mg or 1.5 mmol/kg) caused a 52% decrease in cytochrome P-450, a 71% decrease in p-nitrophenetole O-deethylase activity, and a 77% decrease in ethylmorphine N-demethylase activity. Hepatic glutathione levels were unaffected by aluminum, whereas metallothionein (MT) was induced in both liver and kidney. The distribution of endogenous metals normally associated with MT was altered by aluminum administration. At the highest dose of aluminum (40 mg/kg), zinc levels were increased in liver cytosol (154%), while copper levels were unchanged in liver, but decreased in kidney (70%). Aluminum was present in the liver and kidney. Of the aluminum in the liver, less than 5% was in the cytosol, bound to a MT-like protein. It is concluded that acute ip administration of aluminum adversely effects hepatic drug metabolism and that aluminum induces and binds to MT or a MT-like protein.


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