LPS Impairs Detoxification

Hepatic cytochrome P450 (P450) is a detoxification system coded in our genes. This system has gotten a lot of attention because drugs are detoxed through drug-metabolizing enzyme activities. However P450's play a key role role in detoxification of other foreign chemicals, including the toxic chemicals found in plants. Below are three articles that describe how LPS disturbs hepatic cytochrome P450 (P450)-dependent drug-metabolizing enzyme activities, thus hindering the body's ability to detox.

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In experimental animals, injection of gram-negative endotoxin (LPS) decreases hepatic cytochrome P450-mediated drug metabolism. To evaluate this phenomenon in a human model of gram-negative sepsis, LPS was administered on two consecutive days to healthy male volunteers during which time a cocktail of antipyrine (AP-250 mg), hexobarbital (HB-500 mg), and theophylline (TH-150 mg) was ingested and the apparent oral clearance of each drug determined. Each subject had a control drug clearance study with saline injections. In the first experiment, six subjects received the drug cocktail 0.5 h after the first dose of LPS. In the second experiment, another six subjects received the drug cocktail 0.5 h after the second dose of LPS. In both experiments, LPS caused the expected physiologic responses of inflammation including fever with increases in serum concentrations of TNF alpha, IL-1 beta, IL-6, and acute phase reactants. In the first experiment, only minor decreases in clearances of the probe drugs were observed (7-12%). However in the second experiment, marked decreases in the clearances of AP (35, 95% CI 18-48%), HB (27, 95% CI 14-34%), and TH (22, 95% CI 12-32%) were seen. The decreases in AP clearance correlated with initial peak values of TNF alpha (r = 0.82) and IL-6 (r = 0.86). These data show that in humans the inflammatory response to even a very low dose of LPS significantly decreases hepatic cytochrome P450-mediated drug metabolism and this effect evolves over a 24-h period. It is likely that septic patients with much higher exposures to LPS have more profound inhibition of drug metabolism.


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Bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and a diverse array of other immunostimulants and cytokines suppress the metabolism of endogenous and exogenous substances by reducing activity of the hepatic cytochrome P450 mixed-function oxidase system. Although this effect of immunostimulants was first described almost 40 yr ago, the mechanism is obscure. Immunostimulants are now known to cause NO overproduction by cells via induction of nitric oxide synthase. We have investigated whether NO overproduction is involved in suppressing hepatic metabolism by LPS. In vitro treatment of hepatic microsomes with NO, produced by chemical decomposition of 3-morpholinosydnonimine or by nitric oxide synthase, substantially suppressed cytochrome P450-dependent oxygenation reactions. This effect of NO was seen with hepatic microsomes prepared from two species (rat and chicken) and after exposure to chemicals that induce distinct molecular isoforms of cytochromes P450 (beta-naphthoflavone, 3-methylcholanthrene, and phenobarbital). Spectral studies indicate that NO reacts in vitro with both Fe(2+)- and Fe(3+)-hemes in microsomal cytochromes P450. In vivo, LPS diminished the phenobarbital-induced dealkylation of 7-pentoxyresorufin by rat liver microsomes and reduced the apparent P450 content as measured by CO binding. These LPS effects were associated with induction of NO synthesis; LPS-induced NO synthesis showed a strong positive correlation with the severity of cytochrome P450 inhibition. The decrease in both hepatic microsomal P450 activity and CO binding caused by LPS was largely prevented by the selective NO synthase inhibitor N omega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester. Our findings implicate NO over-production as a major factor mediating the suppression of hepatic metabolism by immunostimulants such as LPS.


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1: Drug Metab Dispos. 2004 Apr;32(4):437-41.

Endotoxin-mediated disturbance of hepatic cytochrome P450 function and development of endotoxin tolerance in the rat model of dextran sulfate sodium-induced experimental colitis.

* Masubuchi Y,

* Horie T. Department of Biopharmaceutics, Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Chiba University, 1-33 Yayoi-cho, Inage-ku, Chiba 263-8522, Japan. horieto@p.chiba-u.ac.j

p Hepatobiliary abnormalities have been described in patients with chronic inflammatory bowel diseases. Hepatic cytochrome P450 (P450)-dependent drug-metabolizing enzyme activities and susceptibility to a hepatotoxin, d-galactosamine, were determined in rats with dextran sulfate sodium (DSS)-induced colitis to assess whether liver function is affected in the model of inflammatory bowel disease. Colitis was induced by treatment of rats with 3% DSS in drinking water for 7 days. Liver microsomes for enzyme activities and serum for biological analysis were prepared from the rats with colitis, along with untreated and lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-treated rats. Other rats received intraperitoneal injection of d-galactosamine to assess their susceptibility to the toxin-induced liver injury. Treatment of rats with DSS resulted in not only colitis but also decreases in hepatic P450-dependent drug-metabolizing enzyme activities. Elevated endotoxin was found in portal blood, which was not associated with liver injury. The potency and the isoform selectivity in the suppression of the P450 enzymes by DSS treatment were similar to those of LPS-treated rats. Coadministration of antibiotics, polymyxin B or metronidazole, with DSS protected rats from decreases in some but not all P450 enzyme activities, indicating partial involvement of bacterial endotoxin in the P450 decreases. The rats with colitis were less susceptible than untreated rats to d-galactosamine-induced liver injury and TNF-alpha production, suggesting development of endotoxin tolerance in DSS-colitis. In conclusion, these results suggest that the DSS-colitis leads to endotoxin-mediated down-regulation of hepatic P450 enzymes and protection against d-galactosamine-induced liver injury, probably due to endotoxin tolerance.

PMID: 15039297 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

Full article:
http://dmd.aspetjournals.org/cgi/content/full/32/4/437