929 resultados para SATURABLE BRAGG REFLECTOR
Resumo:
A purine-rich splicing enhancer from a constitutive exon has been shown to shift the alternative splicing of calcitonin/CGRP pre-mRNA in vivo. Here, we demonstrate that the native repetitive GAA sequence comprises the optimal enhancer element and specifically binds a saturable complex of proteins required for general splicing in vitro. This complex contains a 37-kDa protein that directly binds the repetitive GAA sequence and SRp40, a member of the SR family of non-snRNP splicing factors. While purified SR proteins do not stably bind the repetitive GAA element, exogenous SR proteins become associated with the GAA element in the presence of nuclear extracts and stimulate GAA-dependent splicing. These results suggest that repetitive GAA sequences enhance splicing by binding a protein complex containing a sequence-specific RNA binding protein and a general splicing activator that, in turn, recruit additional SR proteins. This type of mechanism resembles the tra/tra-2-dependent recruitment of SR proteins to the Drosophila doublesex alternative splicing regulatory element.
Resumo:
MRP is a recently isolated ATP-binding cassette family transporter. We previously reported transfection studies that established that MRP confers multidrug resistance [Kruh, G. D., Chan, A., Myers, K., Gaughan, K., Miki, T. & Aaronson, S. A. (1994) Cancer Res. 54, 1649-1652] and that expression of MRP is associated with enhanced cellular efflux of lipophilic cytotoxic agents [Breuninger, L. M., Paul, S., Gaughan, K., Miki, T., Chan, A., Aaronson, S. A. & Kruh, G. D. (1995) Cancer Res. 55, 5342-5347]. To examine the biochemical mechanism by which MRP confers multidrug resistance, drug uptake experiments were performed using inside-out membrane vesicles prepared from NIH 3T3 cells transfected with an MRP expression vector. ATP-dependent transport was observed for several lipophilic cytotoxic agents including daunorubicin, etoposide, and vincristine, as well as for the glutathione conjugate leukotriene C4 (LTC4). However, only marginally increased uptake was observed for vinblastine and Taxol. Drug uptake was osmotically sensitive and saturable with regard to substrate concentration, with Km values of 6.3 microM, 4.4 microM, 4.2 microM, 35 nM, and 38 microM, for daunorubicin, etoposide, vincristine, LTC4, and ATP, respectively. The broad substrate specificity of MRP was confirmed by the observation that daunorubicin transport was competitively inhibited by reduced and oxidized glutathione, the glutathione conjugates S-(p-azidophenacyl)-glutathione (APA-SG) and S-(2,4-dinitrophenyl)glutathione (DNP-SG), arsenate, and the LTD4 antagonist MK571. This study establishes that MRP pumps unaltered lipophilic cytotoxic drugs, and suggests that this activity is an important mechanism by which the transporter confers multidrug resistance. The present study also indicates that the substrate specificity of MRP is overlapping but distinct from that of P-glycoprotein, and includes both the neutral or mildly cationic natural product cytotoxic drugs and the anionic products of glutathione conjugation. The widespread expression of MRP in tissues, combined with its ability to transport both lipophilic xenobiotics and the products of phase II detoxification, indicates that the transporter represents a widespread and remarkably versatile cellular defense mechanism.
Resumo:
More than 30 years ago, Brambell published the hypothesis bearing his name [Brambell, F. W. R., Hemmings, W. A. & Morris, 1. C. (1964) Nature (London) 203, 1352-1355] that remains as the cornerstone for thinking on IgG catabolism. To explain the long survival of IgG relative to other plasma proteins and its pattern of increased fractional catabolism with high concentrations of IgG, Brambell postulated specific IgG "protection receptors" (FcRp) that would bind IgG in pinocytic vacuoles and redirect its transport to the circulation; when the FcRp was saturated, the excess unbound IgG then would pass to unrestricted lysosomal catabolism. Brambell subsequently postulated the neonatal gut transport receptor (FcRn) and showed its similar saturable character. FcRn was recently cloned but FcRp has not been identified. Using a genetic knockout that disrupts the FcRn and intestinal IgG transport, we show that this lesion also disrupts the IgG protection receptor, supporting the identity of these two receptors. IgG catabolism was 10-fold faster and IgG levels were correspondingly lower in mutant than in wild-type mice, whereas IgA was the same between groups, demonstrating the specific effects on the IgG system. Disruption of the FcRp in the mutant mice was also shown to abrogate the classical pattern of decreased IgG survival with higher IgC concentration. Finally, studies in normal mice with monomeric antigen-antibody complexes showed differential catabolism in which antigen dissociates in the endosome and passes to the lysosome, whereas the associated antibody is returned to circulation; in mutant mice, differential catabolism was lost and the whole complex cleared at the same accelerated rate as albumin, showing the central role of the FcRp to the differential catabolism mechanism. Thus, the same receptor protein that mediates the function of the FcRn transiently in the neonate is shown to have its functionally dominant expression as the FcRp throughout life, resolving a longstanding mystery of the identity of the receptor for the protection of IgG. This result also identifies an important new member of the class of recycling surface receptors and enables the design of protein adaptations to exploit this mechanism to improve survivals of other therapeutic proteins in vivo.
Resumo:
An adipocyte membrane glycoprotein, (FAT), homologous to human CD36, has been previously implicated in the binding/transport of long-chain fatty acids. It bound reactive derivatives of long-chain fatty acids and binding was specific and associated with significant inhibition of fatty acid uptake. Tissue distribution of the protein and regulation of its expression were also consistent with its postulated role. In this report, we have examined the effects of FAT expression on rates and properties of fatty acid uptake by Ob17PY fibroblasts lacking the protein. Three clones (P21, P22, and P25) were selected based on FAT mRNA and protein levels. Cell surface labeling could be demonstrated with the anti-CD36 antibody FITC-OKM5. In line with this, the major fraction of immunoreactive FAT was associated with the plasma membrane fraction. Assays of oleate and/or palmitate uptake demonstrated higher rates in the three FAT-expressing clones, compared to cells transfected with the empty vector. Clone P21, which had the highest protein levels on Western blots, exhibited the largest increase in transport rates. Fatty acid uptake in FAT-expressing P21 cells reflected two components, a phloretin-sensitive high-affinity saturable component with a Km of 0.004 microM and a basal phloretin-insensitive component that was a linear function of unbound fatty acid. P21 cells incorporated more exogenous fatty acid into phospholipids, indicating that binding of fatty acids was followed by their transfer into the cell and that both processes were increased by FAT expression. The data support the interpretation that FAT/CD36 functions as a high-affinity membrane receptor/transporter for long-chain fatty acids.
Resumo:
To determine inhalational anesthetic binding domains on a ligand-gated ion channel, I used halothane direct photoaffinity labeling of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) in native Torpedo membranes. [14C]Halothane photoaffinity labeling of both the native Torpedo membranes and the isolated nAChR was saturable, with Kd values within the clinically relevant range. All phospholipids were labeled, with greater than 95% of the label in the acyl chain region. Electrophoresis of labeled nAChR demonstrated no significant subunit selectivity for halothane incorporation. Within the alpha-subunit, greater than 90% of label was found in the endoprotease Glu-C digestion fragments which contain the four transmembrane regions, and the pattern was different from that reported for photoactivatable phospholipid binding to the nAChR. Unlabeled halothane reduced labeling more than did isoflurane, suggesting differences in the binding domains for inhalational anesthetics in the nAChR. These data suggest multiple similar binding domains for halothane in the transmembrane region of the nAChR.
Resumo:
The presence of a proton-coupled electrogenic high-affinity peptide transporter in the apical membrane of tubular cells has been demonstrated by microperfusion studies and by use of brush border membrane vesicles. The transporter mediates tubular uptake of filtered di- and tripeptides and aminocephalosporin antibiotics. We have used expression cloning in Xenopus laevis oocytes for identification and characterization of the renal high-affinity peptide transporter. Injection of poly(A)+ RNA isolated from rabbit kidney cortex into oocytes resulted in expression of a pH-dependent transport activity for the aminocephalosporin antibiotic cefadroxil. After size fractionation of poly(A)+ RNA the transport activity was identified in the 3.0- to 5.0-kb fractions, which were used for construction of a cDNA library. The library was screened for expression of cefadroxil transport after injection of complementary RNA synthesized in vitro from different pools of clones. A single clone (rPepT2) was isolated that stimulated cefadroxil uptake into oocytes approximately 70-fold at a pH of 6.0. Kinetic analysis of cefadroxil uptake expressed by the transporter's complementary RNA showed a single saturable high-affinity transport system shared by dipeptides, tripeptides, and selected amino-beta-lactam antibiotics. Electrophysiological studies established that the transport activity is electrogenic and affected by membrane potential. Sequencing of the cDNA predicts a protein of 729 amino acids with 12 membrane-spanning domains. Although there is a significant amino acid sequence identity (47%) to the recently cloned peptide transporters from rabbit and human small intestine, the renal transporter shows distinct structural and functional differences.
Resumo:
The helix-coil transition equilibrium of polypeptides in aqueous solution was studied by molecular dynamics simulation. The peptide growth simulation method was introduced to generate dynamic models of polypeptide chains in a statistical (random) coil or an alpha-helical conformation. The key element of this method is to build up a polypeptide chain during the course of a molecular transformation simulation, successively adding whole amino acid residues to the chain in a predefined conformation state (e.g., alpha-helical or statistical coil). Thus, oligopeptides of the same length and composition, but having different conformations, can be incrementally grown from a common precursor, and their relative conformational free energies can be calculated as the difference between the free energies for growing the individual peptides. This affords a straightforward calculation of the Zimm-Bragg sigma and s parameters for helix initiation and helix growth. The calculated sigma and s parameters for the polyalanine alpha-helix are in reasonable agreement with the experimental measurements. The peptide growth simulation method is an effective way to study quantitatively the thermodynamics of local protein folding.
Resumo:
Macrophage-stimulating protein (MSP) was originally identified as an inducer of murine resident peritoneal macrophage responsiveness to chemoattractants. We recently showed that the product of RON, a protein tyrosine kinase cloned from a human keratinocyte library, is the receptor for MSP. Similarity of murine stk to RON led us to determine if the stk gene product is the murine receptor for MSP. Radiolabeled MSP could bind to NIH 3T3 cells transfected with murine stk cDNA (3T3/stk). Binding was saturable and was inhibited by unlabeled MSP but not by structurally related proteins, including hepatocyte growth factor and plasminogen. Specific binding to STK was demonstrated by cross-linking of 125I-labeled MSP to membrane proteins of 3T3/stk cells, which resulted in a protein complex with a molecular mass of 220 kDa. This radiolabeled complex comprised 125I-MSP and STK, since it could be immunoprecipitated by antibodies to the STK beta chain. Binding of MSP to stk cDNA-transfected cells induced tyrosine phosphorylation of the 150-kDa STK beta chain within 1 min and caused increased motile activity. These results establish the murine stk gene product as a specific transmembrane protein tyrosine kinase receptor for MSP. Inasmuch as the stk cDNA was cloned from a hematopoietic stem cell, our data suggest that in addition to macrophages and keratinocytes, a cell in the hematopoietic lineage may also be a target for MSP.
Resumo:
Mammalian class A macrophage-specific scavenger receptors (SR-A) exhibit unusually broad binding specificity for a wide variety of polyanionic ligands. The properties of these receptors suggest that they may be involved in atherosclerosis and host defense. We have previously observed a similar receptor activity in Drosophila melanogaster embryonic macrophages and in the Drosophila macrophage-like Schneider L2 cell line. Expression cloning was used to isolate from L2 cells a cDNA that encodes a third class (class C) of scavenger receptor, Drosophila SR-CI (dSR-CI). dSR-CI expression was restricted to macrophages/hemocytes during embryonic development. When expressed in mammalian cells, dSR-CI exhibited high affinity and saturable binding of 125I-labeled acetylated low density lipoprotein and mediated its chloroquine-dependent, presumably lysosomal, degradation. Although the broad polyanionic ligand-binding specificity of dSR-CI was similar to that of SR-A, their predicted protein sequences are not similar. dSR-CI is a 609-residue type I integral membrane protein containing several well-known sequence motifs, including two complement control protein (CCP) domains and somatomedin B, MAM, and mucin-like domains. Macrophage scavenger receptors apparently mediate important, well-conserved functions and may be pattern-recognition receptors that arose early in the evolution of host-defense mechanisms. Genetic and physiologic analysis of dSR-CI function in Drosophila should provide further insights into the roles played by scavenger receptors in host defense and development.
Resumo:
Considerando que o petróleo quando extraído dos poços em águas profundas chega a ter teor de água superior a 50% e que antes de ser enviado à refinaria deve ter uma quantidade de água inferior a 1%, torna-se necessário o uso de técnicas de redução da quantidade de água. Durante a extração do petróleo formam-se emulsões de água em óleo que são muito estáveis devido a um filme interfacial contendo asfaltenos e/ou resinas ao redor das gotas de água. Nesse trabalho é apresentada a utilização de ondas estacionárias de ultrassom para realizar a quebra dessas emulsões. Quando gotículas de água com dimensões da ordem de 10m, muito menores que o comprimento de onda, são submetidas a um campo acústico estacionário em óleo, a força de radiação acústica empurra as gotículas para os nós de pressão da onda. Uma célula de coalescência com frequência central ao redor de 1 MHz, constituída por quatro camadas sendo uma piezelétrica, uma de acoplamento sólido, uma com o líquido e outra refletora, foi modelada empregando o método da matriz de transferência, que permite calcular a impedância elétrica em função da frequência. Para minimizar o efeito do gradiente de temperatura entre a entrada e a saída da cavidade da célula, quando está em operação, foram utilizados dois transdutores piezelétricos posicionados transversalmente ao fluxo que são excitados e controlados independentemente. Foi implementado um controlador digital para ajustar a frequência e a potência de cada transdutor. O controlador tem como entrada o módulo e a fase da corrente elétrica no transdutor e como saída a amplitude da tensão elétrica e a frequência. Para as células desenvolvidas, o algoritmo de controle segue um determinado pico de ressonância no interior da cavidade da célula no intervalo de frequência de 1,09 a 1,15 MHz. A separação acústica de emulsões de água em óleo foi realizada em uma planta de laboratório de processamento de petróleo no CENPES/PETROBRAS. Foram testados a variação da quantidade de desemulsificante, o teor inicial de água na emulsão e a influência da vazão do sistema, com uma potência de 80 W. O teor final de água na emulsão mostrou que a aplicação de ultrassom aumentou a coalescência de água da emulsão, em todas as condições testadas, quando comparada a um teste sem aplicação de ultrassom. Identificou-se o tempo de residência no interior da célula de separação como um fator importante no processo de coalescência de emulsões de água e óleo. O uso de desemulsificante químico é necessário para realizar a separação, porém, em quantidades elevadas implicaria no uso de processos adicionais antes do repasse final do petróleo à refinaria. Os teores iniciais de água na emulsão de 30 e 50% indicam que o uso da onda estacionária na coalescência de emulsões não tem limitação quanto a esse parâmetro. De acordo com os resultados obtidos em laboratório, essa técnica seria indicada como uma alternativa para integrar um sistema de processamento primário em conjunto com um separador eletrostático.
Resumo:
O presente trabalho está fundamentado no desenvolvimento de uma metodologia e/ou uma tecnologia de obtenção e caracterização de filtros ópticos de interferência de banda passante variável [C.M. da Silva, 2010] e de banda de corte variáveis, constituídos por refletores dielétricos multicamadas de filmes finos intercalados por cavidades de Fabry-Perot não planares com espessuras linearmente variáveis, que apresentam a propriedade do deslocamento linear da transmitância máxima espectral em função da posição, isto é, um Filtro de Interferência Variável (FIV). Este método apresenta novas e abrangentes possibilidades de confecção de filtros ópticos de interferência variável: lineares ou em outras formas desejadas, de comprimento de onda de corte variável (passa baixa ou alta) e filtros de densidade neutra variável, através da deposição de metais, além de aplicações em uma promissora e nova área de pesquisa na deposição de filmes finos não uniformes. A etapa inicial deste desenvolvimento foi o estudo da teoria dos filtros ópticos dielétricos de interferência para projetar e construir um filtro óptico banda passante convencional de um comprimento de onda central com camadas homogêneas. A etapa seguinte, com base na teoria óptica dos filmes finos já estabelecida, foi desenvolver a extensão destes conhecimentos para determinar que a variação da espessura em um perfil inclinado e linear da cavidade entre os refletores de Bragg é o principal parâmetro para produzir o deslocamento espacial da transmitância espectral, possibilitando o uso de técnicas especiais para se obter uma variação em faixas de bandas de grande amplitude, em um único filtro. Um trabalho de modelagem analítica e análise de tolerância de espessuras dos filmes depositados foram necessários para a seleção da estratégia do \"mascaramento\" seletivo do material evaporado formado na câmara e-Beam (elétron-Beam) com o objetivo da obtenção do filtro espectral linear variável de características desejadas. Para tanto, de acordo com os requisitos de projeto, foram necessárias adaptações em uma evaporadora por e-Beam para receber um obliterador mecânico especialmente projetado para compatibilizar os parâmetros das técnicas convencionais de deposição com o objetivo de se obter um perfil inclinado, perfil este previsto em processos de simulação para ajustar e calibrar a geometria do obliterador e se obter um filme depositado na espessura, conformação e disposição pretendidos. Ao final destas etapas de modelagem analítica, simulação e refinamento recorrente, foram determinados os parâmetros de projeto para obtenção de um determinado FIV (Filtro de Interferência Variável) especificado. Baseadas nos FIVs muitas aplicações são emergentes: dispositivos multi, hiper e ultra espectral para sensoriamento remoto e análise ambiental, sistemas Lab-on-Chip, biossensores, detectores chip-sized, espectrofotometria de fluorescência on-chip, detectores de deslocamento de comprimento de onda, sistemas de interrogação, sistemas de imageamento espectral, microespectrofotômetros e etc. No escopo deste trabalho se pretende abranger um estudo de uma referência básica do emprego do (FIV) filtro de interferência variável como detector de varredura de comprimento de ondas em sensores biológicos e químicos compatível com pós processamento CMOS. Um sistema básico que é constituído por um FIV montado sobre uma matriz de sensores ópticos conectada a um módulo eletrônico dedicado a medir a intensidade da radiação incidente e as bandas de absorção das moléculas presentes em uma câmara de detecção de um sistema próprio de canais de microfluidos, configurando-se em um sistema de aquisição e armazenamento de dados (DAS), é proposto para demonstrar as possibilidades do FIV e para servir de base para estudos exploratórios das suas diversas potencialidades que, entre tantas, algumas são mencionadas ao longo deste trabalho. O protótipo obtido é capaz de analisar fluidos químicos ou biológicos e pode ser confrontado com os resultados obtidos por equipamentos homologados de uso corrente.
Resumo:
In this paper we propose a two-component polarimetric model for soil moisture estimation on vineyards suited for C-band radar data. According to a polarimetric analysis carried out here, this scenario is made up of one dominant direct return from the soil and a multiple scattering component accounting for disturbing and nonmodeled signal fluctuations from soil and short vegetation. We propose a combined X-Bragg/Fresnel approach to characterize the polarized direct response from soil. A validation of this polarimetric model has been performed in terms of its consistency with respect to the available data both from RADARSAT-2 and from indoor measurements. High inversion rates are reported for different phenological stages of vines, and the model gives a consistent interpretation of the data as long as the volume component power remains about or below 50% of the surface contribution power. However, the scarcity of soil moisture measurements in this study prevents the validation of the algorithm in terms of the accuracy of soil moisture retrieval and an extensive campaign is required to fully demonstrate the validity of the model. Different sources of mismatches between the model and the data have been also discussed and analyzed.
Resumo:
As human populations and resource consumption increase, it is increasingly important to monitor the quality of our environment. While laboratory instruments offer useful information, portable, easy to use sensors would allow environmental analysis to occur on-site, at lower cost, and with minimal operator training. We explore the synthesis, modification, and applications of modified polysiloxane in environmental sensing. Multiple methods of producing modified siloxanes were investigated. Oligomers were formed by using functionalized monomers, producing siloxane materials containing silicon hydride, methyl, and phenyl side chains. Silicon hydride-functionalized oligomers were further modified by hydrosilylation to incorporate methyl ester and naphthyl side chains. Modifications to the siloxane materials were also carried out using post-curing treatments. Methyl ester-functionalized siloxane was incorporated into the surface of a cured poly(dimethylsiloxane) film by siloxane equilibration. The materials containing methyl esters were hydrolyzed to reveal carboxylic acids, which could later be used for covalent protein immobilization. Finally, the siloxane surfaces were modified to incorporate antibodies by covalent, affinity, and adsorption-based attachment. These modifications were characterized by a variety of methods, including contact angle, attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, dye labels, and 1H nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. The modified siloxane materials were employed in a variety of sensing schemes. Volatile organic compounds were detected using methyl, phenyl, and naphthyl-functionalized materials on a Fabry-Perot interferometer and a refractometer. The Fabry-Perot interferometer was found to detect the analytes upon siloxane extraction by deformation of the Bragg reflectors. The refractometer was used to determine that naphthyl-functionalized siloxanes had elevated refractive indices, rendering these materials more sensitive to some analytes. Antibody-modified siloxanes were used to detect biological analytes through a solid phase microextraction-mediated enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (SPME ELISA). The SPME ELISA was found to have higher analyte sensitivity compared to a conventional ELISA system. The detection scheme was used to detect Escherichia coli at 8500 CFU/mL. These results demonstrate the variety of methods that can be used to modify siloxanes and the wide range of applications of modified siloxanes has been demonstrated through chemical and biological sensing schemes.
Resumo:
L'exposition aux mélanges de contaminants (environnementaux, alimentaires ou thérapeutiques) soulève de nombreuses interrogations et inquiétudes vis-à-vis des probabilités d'interactions toxicocinétiques et toxicodynamiques. Une telle coexposition peut influencer le mode d’action des composants du cocktail et donc de leur toxicité, suite à un accroissement de leurs concentrations internes. Le bisphénol A (4 dihydroxy-2,2-diphenylpropane) est un contaminant chimique répandu de manière ubiquitaire dans notre environnement, largement utilisé dans la fabrication des plastiques avec l’un des plus grands volumes de production à l’échelle mondiale. Il est un perturbateur endocrinien par excellence de type œstrogèno-mimétique. Cette molécule est biotransformée en métabolites non toxiques par un processus de glucuronidation. L'exposition concomitante à plusieurs xénobiotiques peut induire à la baisse le taux de glucuronidation du polluant chimique d'intérêt, entre autres la co-exposition avec des médicaments. Puisque la consommation de produits thérapeutiques est un phénomène grandissant dans la population, la possibilité d’une exposition simultanée est d’autant plus grande et forte. Sachant que l'inhibition métabolique est le mécanisme d'interaction le plus plausible pouvant aboutir à une hausse des niveaux internes ainsi qu’à une modulation de la toxicité prévue, la présente étude visait d'abord à confirmer et caractériser ce type d'interactions métaboliques entre le bisphénol A et le naproxène, qui est un anti-inflammatoire non stéroïdiennes (AINS), sur l'ensemble d'un organe intact en utilisant le système de foie de rat isolé et perfusé (IPRL). Elle visait ensuite à déterminer la cinétique enzymatique de chacune de ces deux substances, seule puis en mélange binaire. Dans un second temps, nous avons évalué aussi l’influence de la présence d'albumine sur la cinétique métabolique et le comportement de ces deux substances étudiées en suivant le même modèle de perfusion in vivo au niveau du foie de rat. Les constantes métaboliques ont été déterminées par régression non linéaire. Les métabolismes du BPA et du NAP seuls ont montré une cinétique saturable avec une vélocité maximale (Vmax) de 8.9 nmol/min/ mg prot de foie et une constante d'affinité de l'enzyme pour le substrat (Km) de 51.6 μM pour le BPA et de 3 nmol/min/mg prot de foie et 149.2 μM pour le NAP. L'analyse des expositions combinées suggère une inhibition compétitive partielle du métabolisme du BPA par le NAP avec une valeur de Ki estimée à 0.3542 μM. Les résultats obtenus montrent que l’analyse de risque pour les polluants environnementaux doit donc prendre en considération la consommation des produits pharmaceutiques comme facteur pouvant accroitre le niveau interne lors d’une exposition donnée. Ces données in vivo sur les interactions métaboliques pourraient être intégrées dans un modèle pharmacocinétique à base physiologique (PBPK) pour prédire les conséquences toxicococinétique (TK) de l'exposition d'un individu à ces mélanges chimiques.
Resumo:
L'exposition aux mélanges de contaminants (environnementaux, alimentaires ou thérapeutiques) soulève de nombreuses interrogations et inquiétudes vis-à-vis des probabilités d'interactions toxicocinétiques et toxicodynamiques. Une telle coexposition peut influencer le mode d’action des composants du cocktail et donc de leur toxicité, suite à un accroissement de leurs concentrations internes. Le bisphénol A (4 dihydroxy-2,2-diphenylpropane) est un contaminant chimique répandu de manière ubiquitaire dans notre environnement, largement utilisé dans la fabrication des plastiques avec l’un des plus grands volumes de production à l’échelle mondiale. Il est un perturbateur endocrinien par excellence de type œstrogèno-mimétique. Cette molécule est biotransformée en métabolites non toxiques par un processus de glucuronidation. L'exposition concomitante à plusieurs xénobiotiques peut induire à la baisse le taux de glucuronidation du polluant chimique d'intérêt, entre autres la co-exposition avec des médicaments. Puisque la consommation de produits thérapeutiques est un phénomène grandissant dans la population, la possibilité d’une exposition simultanée est d’autant plus grande et forte. Sachant que l'inhibition métabolique est le mécanisme d'interaction le plus plausible pouvant aboutir à une hausse des niveaux internes ainsi qu’à une modulation de la toxicité prévue, la présente étude visait d'abord à confirmer et caractériser ce type d'interactions métaboliques entre le bisphénol A et le naproxène, qui est un anti-inflammatoire non stéroïdiennes (AINS), sur l'ensemble d'un organe intact en utilisant le système de foie de rat isolé et perfusé (IPRL). Elle visait ensuite à déterminer la cinétique enzymatique de chacune de ces deux substances, seule puis en mélange binaire. Dans un second temps, nous avons évalué aussi l’influence de la présence d'albumine sur la cinétique métabolique et le comportement de ces deux substances étudiées en suivant le même modèle de perfusion in vivo au niveau du foie de rat. Les constantes métaboliques ont été déterminées par régression non linéaire. Les métabolismes du BPA et du NAP seuls ont montré une cinétique saturable avec une vélocité maximale (Vmax) de 8.9 nmol/min/ mg prot de foie et une constante d'affinité de l'enzyme pour le substrat (Km) de 51.6 μM pour le BPA et de 3 nmol/min/mg prot de foie et 149.2 μM pour le NAP. L'analyse des expositions combinées suggère une inhibition compétitive partielle du métabolisme du BPA par le NAP avec une valeur de Ki estimée à 0.3542 μM. Les résultats obtenus montrent que l’analyse de risque pour les polluants environnementaux doit donc prendre en considération la consommation des produits pharmaceutiques comme facteur pouvant accroitre le niveau interne lors d’une exposition donnée. Ces données in vivo sur les interactions métaboliques pourraient être intégrées dans un modèle pharmacocinétique à base physiologique (PBPK) pour prédire les conséquences toxicococinétique (TK) de l'exposition d'un individu à ces mélanges chimiques.