AI Article Synopsis

  • Hepatotoxicity is a major concern in drug safety studies, prompting the need to understand its mechanisms to evaluate risks for human liver injury.
  • The study focused on DSP-0640, a drug candidate causing liver damage in rats, characterized by changes in liver cell structure and increased expression of certain liver genes.
  • It was found that DSP-0640 may indirectly activate the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) by inhibiting the CYP1A1 enzyme, which affects the clearance of natural AHR activators, suggesting a new pathway for drug-induced liver toxicity.

Article Abstract

Hepatotoxicity is one of the most common toxicities observed in non-clinical safety studies of drug candidates, and it is important to understand the hepatotoxicity mechanism to assess the risk of drug-induced liver injury in humans. In this study, we investigated the mechanism of hepatotoxicity caused by 2-[2-Methyl-1-(oxan-4-yl)-1H-benzimidazol-5-yl]-1,3-benzoxazole (DSP-0640), a drug candidate that showed hepatotoxicity characterized by centrilobular hypertrophy and vacuolation of hepatocytes in a 4-week oral repeated-dose toxicity study in male rats. In the liver of rats treated with DSP-0640, the expression of aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) target genes, including Cyp1a1, was upregulated. In in vitro reporter assays, however, DSP-0640 showed only minimal AHR-activating potency. Therefore, we investigated the possibility that DSP-0640 indirectly activated AHR by inhibiting the CYP1 enzyme-dependent clearance of endogenous AHR agonists. In in vitro assays, DSP-0640 showed inhibitory effects on both rat and human CYP1A1 and enhanced rat and human AHR-mediated reporter gene expression induced by 6-formylindolo[3,2-b]carbazole, a well-known endogenous AHR agonist. The possible involvement of CYP1A1 inhibition in AHR activation was also demonstrated with other hepatotoxic compounds tacrine and albendazole. These results suggest that CYP1A1 inhibition-mediated AHR activation is involved in the hepatotoxicity caused by DSP-0640 and that DSP-0640 might induce hepatotoxicity in humans as well. We propose that CYP1A1 inhibition-mediated AHR activation is a novel mechanism for drug-induced hepatotoxicity.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.2131/jts.47.359DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Hepatotoxicity is a major concern in drug safety studies, prompting the need to understand its mechanisms to evaluate risks for human liver injury.
  • The study focused on DSP-0640, a drug candidate causing liver damage in rats, characterized by changes in liver cell structure and increased expression of certain liver genes.
  • It was found that DSP-0640 may indirectly activate the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) by inhibiting the CYP1A1 enzyme, which affects the clearance of natural AHR activators, suggesting a new pathway for drug-induced liver toxicity.
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