肝细胞原代单层培养的外生代谢和毒性。

NIPH annals Pub Date : 1985-12-01
J A Holme
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引用次数: 0

摘要

肝细胞原代单层培养对于体外筛选细胞毒性和基因毒性化学物质以及研究这些化合物的作用机制非常有用。然而,肝细胞作为单层培养会导致药物代谢酶活性的变化,细胞色素P-450依赖性酶活性的降低是这种变化的最重要例子。因此,肝细胞培养物中有毒化学物质的整体代谢似乎与分离后早期的体内情况最接近。与悬浮培养相比,单层培养可以在更长的时间内跟踪化学物质的毒性作用。然而,肝细胞不容易在培养中复制,使得基因或染色体突变效应的研究不可能。尽管存在这些局限性,但一些研究表明,肝细胞单层为研究化学致癌物的遗传毒性效应的许多方面提供了一个很好的实验模型,例如DNA共价结合加合物的形成、DNA断裂和DNA修复合成。各种药物代谢酶抑制剂的使用表明,一种致癌物可能由不同的代谢物引起不同的细胞效应。在肝细胞培养中,人们对致癌过程的许多方面进行了广泛的研究,如共致癌物、抗致癌物和外源代谢诱导剂的作用,以及菌株和物种在代谢中的变化。肝细胞培养物也被成功地用作与其他细胞共同培养的代谢激活系统,这些细胞将对细胞毒性、致突变和/或致癌代谢物产生反应。与在此类研究中使用亚细胞组分相比,使用肝细胞单层作为代谢激活系统似乎与体内情况更相关。然而,当将这种体外研究的数据外推到体内情况时,应该记住,癌症的发展可能更多地与激活剂量的比例有关,而与激活速率的关系较小。此外,癌症的发展是一个复杂的、多阶段的过程,显然不仅取决于化学物质的基因毒性和细胞毒性特征。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Xenobiotic metabolism and toxicity in primary monolayer cultures of hepatocytes.

Primary monolayer cultures of hepatocytes are very useful for both in vitro screening of cytotoxic and genotoxic chemicals and for studies on mechanisms of action of such compounds. However, culturing hepatocytes as monolayers result changes in the activity of drug metabolizing enzymes, with a reduction of cytochrome P-450 dependent enzyme activities as the most important examples of such changes. Thus, the overall metabolism of toxic chemicals in hepatocyte cultures seem to be closest to the in vivo situation in the earlier time periods after isolation. Compared to suspension cultures, monolayer cultures makes it possible to follow toxic effects of a chemical over a longer period of time. However, hepatocytes do not readily replicate in culture, making studies on gene or chromosomal mutational effects impossible. Despite these limitations, several studies have shown that monolayers of hepatocytes represent a good experimental model for studies on many aspects of the genotoxic effects of chemical carcinogens, such as the formation of covalently bound adducts to DNA, DNA breakage and DNA repair synthesis. The use of inhibitors of various drug metabolizing enzymes, have illustrated that different cellular effects of a carcinogen may be caused by different metabolites. Many aspects of modification of the carcinogenic process, such as the effects of co-carcinogens, anti-carcinogens and inducers of xenobiotic metabolism, as well as strain and species variations in metabolism, have been widely studied in hepatocyte cultures. Hepatocyte cultures have also been successfully used as a metabolic activation system in co-cultures with other cells which will respond to cytotoxic, mutagenic and/or carcinogenic metabolites. The use of monolayers of hepatocytes as metabolic activation system seems often to be more relevance to in vivo situation compared to the use of subcellular fractions in such studies. When extrapolating data from such in vitro studies to the in vivo situation it should be borne in mind, however, that cancer development may relate more to the proportion of the dose which is activated and less on the rate of activation. Furthermore, cancer development is a complex, multistage process which obviously is not only dependent on the genotoxic and cytotoxic characteristics of a chemical.

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