» Articles » PMID: 11786231

Reoxygenation After Cold Hypoxic Storage of Cultured Precision-cut Rat Liver Slices: Effects on Cellular Metabolism and Drug Biotransformation

Overview
Specialties Biochemistry
Biophysics
Date 2002 Jan 12
PMID 11786231
Citations 1
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Cultured rat precision-cut liver slices (PCLS) were used to study the influence of hypothermic preservation and reoxygenation at 37 degrees C on cellular metabolism and drug biotransformation. Cold hypoxic storage caused a depressed metabolism in rat liver slices, but reoxygenation for 8 h at 37 degrees C partially restored the levels of both ATP and GSH and totally restored the capacity to synthesize proteins. Metabolism of midazolam (CYP3A-dependent oxidation) by cold preserved liver slices was decreased by 30% but no further affected by reoxygenation, showing the same profile as freshly cut slices. Such a reoxygenation at 37 degrees C is accompanied by a dramatic loss of CYP3A2 protein while CYP3A1 protein was unaffected. These results suggest that CYP3A2 did not play a major role in midazolam oxidation. Such results are not consistent with a putative reoxygenation injury but rather with cold hypoxic damage. Since cold preserved liver slices did not respond to bacterial endotoxin stimulation (lipopolysaccharides), a minor role of non-parenchymal cells is suggested as mediators for deleterious effects developed during the cold storage.

Citing Articles

An in vitro comparative study with furyl-1,4-quinones endowed with anticancer activities.

Benites J, Valderrama J, Taper H, Buc Calderon P Invest New Drugs. 2010; 29(5):760-7.

PMID: 20237828 DOI: 10.1007/s10637-010-9419-1.