Fatty acid binding protein is a major determinant of hepatic pharmacokinetics of palmitate and its metabolites


Autoria(s): Hung, DY; Burczynski, FJ; Chang, P; Lewis, A; Masci, PP; Siebert, GA; Anissimov, YG; Roberts, MS
Data(s)

01/01/2003

Resumo

Disposition kinetics of [H-3] palmitate and its low-molecular-weight metabolites in perfused rat livers were studied using the multiple-indicator dilution technique, a selective assay for [H-3] palmitate and its low-molecular-weight metabolites, and several physiologically based pharmacokinetic models. The level of liver fatty acid binding protein (L-FABP), other intrahepatic binding proteins (microsomal protein, albumin, and glutathione S-transferase) and the outflow profiles of [H-3] palmitate and metabolites were measured in four experimentalgroups of rats: 1) males; 2) clofibrate-treated males; 3) females; and 4) pregnant females. A slow-diffusion/bound model was found to better describe the hepatic disposition of unchanged [H-3] palmitate than other pharmacokinetic models. The L-FABP levels followed the order: pregnant female > clofibrate-treated male > female > male. Levels of other intrahepatic proteins did not differ significantly. The hepatic extraction ratio and mean transit time for unchanged palmitate, as well as the production of low-molecular-weight metabolites of palmitate and their retention in the liver, increased with increasing L-FABP levels. Palmitate metabolic clearance, permeability-surface area product, retention of palmitate by the liver, and cytoplasmic diffusion constant for unchanged [H-3] palmitate also increased with increasing L-FABP levels. It is concluded that the variability in hepatic pharmacokinetics of unchanged [H-3] palmitate and its low-molecular-weight metabolites in perfused rat livers is related to levels of L-FABP and not those of other intrahepatic proteins.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:65465

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

American Physiological Society

Palavras-Chave #Gastroenterology & Hepatology #Physiology #Clofibrate #Pregnancy #Multiple Indicator Dilution #Hepatic Extraction Ratio #Cytoplasmic Diffusion Constant #Perfused-rat-liver #Disposition Relationships #Enzyme Heterogeneity #Cytoplasmic-binding #Dispersion Model #Intact Liver #Transport #Elimination #Kinetics #C1 #320503 Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics #730118 Organs, diseases and abnormal conditions not elsewhere classified
Tipo

Journal Article