Affiliation:
1. Department of Medicine, Section of Medical Toxicology, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Box B-146, 4200 E. 9th Avenue, Denver, Colorado 80262, USA
Abstract
1 Omeprazole, a proton pump inhibitor therapeutically administered for the treatment of gastric ulcers, induces the expression of cytochromes P4501A1/2 (CYP1A1/2) through transcriptional activation mediated by the Ah (dioxin)-receptor. Primary cultures of hepatocytes isolated from rabbit, rat, mouse and human livers were compared for CYP1A1/2 mRNA inducibility by omeprazole (1 to 100 μM). 2 Primary cultures of human hepatocytes were the most sensitive to the inducing effects of omeprazole. Rabbit hepatocytes were the only other cells studied that showed induced CYP1A1/2 mRNA expression from a concentration lower than 100 μM (i.e., 10 μM). Rat hepatocytes were the least sensitive to omeprazole induction. The response of mouse hepatocytes to omeprazole treatment was variable, with CYP1A1/2 mRNA expression being induced in only two of the three cultures examined. 3 Differences in the time dependence of CYP1A1/2 mRNA expression were observed between species. In general, after treatment of hepatocytes with omeprazole the levels of CYP1A1 mRNA peaked prior to that of CYP1A2 mRNA. 4 Due to the interspecific variability of CYP1A mRNA inducibility by omeprazole, we conclude that human hepatocytes in culture are probably the only appropriate animal model for prediction of CYP1A induction in humans.
Subject
Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Toxicology,General Medicine
Cited by
42 articles.
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