Further studies on the increase in drug-metabolizing capacity adjacent to intrahepatic Morris hepatomas

1981 
Abstract Microsomal cytochrome P-450 content was higher in histologically non-tumorous liver adjacent to intrahepatically implanted Morris hepatomas 5123D or 7795 than in histologically normal liver far removed from each tumor. V max values for microsomal benzo[ a ]pyrene monooxygenase activity and cyclophosphamide activation were also significantly higher in tumor-adjacent liver than in normal liver far removed from tumor. K m values of these reactions were unchanged. After intrahepatic implantation, inert spheres of several different materials produced no regional differences in hepatic microsomal cytochrome P-450 content. Both intrahepatic Morris hepatomas exhibited markedly reduced cytochrome P-450 content and benzo[ a ]pyrene monooxygenase activity. Cyclophosphamide biotransformation could not be detected in microsomes from either Morris hepatoma. Similar recoveries from microsomes of far-removed and tumor-adjacent liver indicated that differences between these regions in drug-metabolizing activity could not be attributed to different stabilities or sedimenting properties of their microsomes. Although microsomal recovery was significantly less from hepatomas than from far-removed or tumor-adjacent liver, this loss of tumor microsomes accounted for only a small part of the reductions in cytochrome P-450-mediated monooxygenases observed within tumors. Compared to control rats. tumor-bearing rats exhibited no change in hepatic drug-metabolizing capacity measured in vivo by hexobarbital sleeping times and antipyrine elimination rates. Phenobarbital (PB) pretreatment of tumor-bearing rats induced cytochrome P-450 to different extents within far-removed liver, tumoradjacent liver, and both hepatomas. The same differential inducibility occurred with PB pretreatment for cyclophosphamide activation. After PB induction, differences in drug-metabolizing activity between far-removed and tumor-adjacent liver disappeared; though induced, these activities remained lower in the hepatomas than in other regions. These changes in drug-metabolizing activity in both basal and PB-induced states of various hepatic regions were related to changes in cellularity of tumor-adjacent tissue. Hepatocellular nuclei prepared from tumor-containing liver were separated into diploid and tetraploid classes by sucrose density gradient centrifugation. Compared to far-removed liver, tumoradjacent liver contained significantly more diploid nuclei and less tetraploid nuclei.
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