Role of nitric oxide in acetaminophen-induced hepatotoxicity in the rat.

Hepatology

Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ 08854-8022, USA.

Published: March 1998

AI Article Synopsis

  • Acetaminophen can cause severe liver damage at high doses, primarily affecting the centrilobular regions, and recent studies suggest that nitric oxide produced in response to inflammation plays a significant role in this injury.
  • Treatment with acetaminophen in rats led to increased liver damage and higher serum transaminase levels, which peaked at 24 hours and correlated with increased expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS).
  • Blocking nitric oxide production using aminoguanidine not only prevented liver damage from acetaminophen but also did not alter the metabolism of the drug, indicating that nitric oxide is a key contributor to the toxic effects of acetaminophen on the liver.

Article Abstract

Acetaminophen is a mild analgesic and antipyretic agent known to cause centrilobular hepatic necrosis at toxic doses. Although this may be due to a direct interaction of reactive acetaminophen metabolites with hepatocyte proteins, recent studies have suggested that cytotoxic mediators produced by parenchymal and nonparenchymal cells also contribute to the pathophysiological process. Nitric oxide is a highly reactive oxidant produced in the liver in response to inflammatory mediators. In the present studies we evaluated the role of nitric oxide in the pathophysiology of acetaminophen-induced liver injury. Treatment of male Long Evans Hooded rats with acetaminophen (1 g/kg) resulted in damage to centrilobular regions of the liver and increases in serum transaminase levels, which were evident within 6 hours of treatment of the animals and reached a maximum at 24 hours. This was correlated with expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) protein in these regions. Hepatocytes isolated from both control and acetaminophen-treated rats were found to readily synthesize nitric oxide in response to inflammatory stimuli. Cells isolated from acetaminophen-treated rats produced more nitric oxide than cells from control animals. Production of nitric oxide by cells from both control and acetaminophen-treated rats was blocked by aminoguanidine, a relatively specific inhibitor of iNOS. Arginine uptake and metabolism studies revealed that the inhibitory effects of aminoguanidine were due predominantly to inhibition of iNOS enzyme activity. Pretreatment of rats with aminoguanidine was found to prevent acetaminophen-induced hepatic necrosis and increases in serum transaminase levels. This was associated with reduced nitric oxide production by hepatocytes. Inhibition of toxicity was not due to alterations in acetaminophen metabolism since aminoguanidine had no effect on hepatocyte cytochrome P4502E1 protein expression or N-acetyl-p-benzoquinone-imine formation. Taken together, these data demonstrate that nitric oxide is an important mediator of acetaminophen-induced hepatotoxicity.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/hep.510270316DOI Listing

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