Role of tumor necrosis factor-α in down-regulation of hepatic cytochrome P450 and P-glycoprotein by endotoxin

2005 
Abstract We investigated the role of tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) in the down-regulation of hepatic P-glycoprotein and cytochrome P 450 (CYP) by endotoxin, using TNF-α gene-deficient (TNF-α −/− ) mice. In the case of P-glycoprotein, endotoxin (10 mg/kg) significantly decreased the expression of hepatic P-glycoprotein in wild-type mice 6 h, but not 24 h, after intraperitoneal injection, with no significant differences in the constitutional expression of P-glycoprotein between wild-type mice and TNF-α −/− mice. However, endotoxin had no effect on the expression of P-glycoprotein in TNF-α −/− mice either 6 or 24 h after injection. When doxorubicin was administered intravenously to TNF-α −/− mice treated 6 h earlier with and without endotoxin, no significant differences in the plasma concentrations of doxorubicin 3 h after injection were observed between endotoxin-treated and untreated TNF-α −/− mice. These results suggest that TNF-α plays a pivotal role in the down-regulation of P-glycoprotein by endotoxin. In the case of CYP, the constitutive expression of hepatic CYP3A2 and CYP2C11 had a tendency to decline in TNF-α −/− mice compared with that in wild-type mice. Endotoxin significantly decreased the expression of hepatic CYP3A2 and CYP2C11 in wild-type mice 24 h after injection, and that decreased expression was significantly greater in TNF-α −/− mice than wild-type mice. When antipyrine was administered intravenously to wild-type mice and TNF-α −/− mice treated 24 h earlier with endotoxin, the plasma concentrations of antipyrine in TNF-α −/− mice 3 h after injection were significantly higher than those in wild-type mice. These findings suggest that TNF-α plays a key role in endotoxin-induced down-regulation of hepatic P-glycoprotein, as well as plays a protective role in the regulation of hepatic CYP3A2 and CYP2C11 against endotoxin-induced acute inflammatory response. In TNF-α −/− mice, other cytokines appear to function as compensation for the lack of endogenous TNF-α.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    47
    References
    27
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []