A review of drug-induced lysosomal disorders of the liver in man and laboratory animals

被引:0
|
作者
Schneider, P [1 ]
Korolenko, TA [1 ]
Busch, U [1 ]
机构
[1] RUSSIAN ACAD MED SCI, INST PHYSIOL, NOVOSIBIRSK, RUSSIA
关键词
hepatocytes; toxins; animals; man; metals; cytostatics; antiparasitics; hypolipidemic drugs;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R602 [外科病理学、解剖学]; R32 [人体形态学];
学科分类号
100101 ;
摘要
Lysosomotropic agents are selectively taken up into lysosomes following their administration to man and animals [de Duve et al. (1974) Biochem. Pharmacol. 23:2494-2531]. The effects of lysosomotropic drugs studied in vivo and in vitro can be used as models of lysosomal storage diseases. These agents include many drugs still used in clinical medicine: aminoglycosides used in antibiotics [Tulkens (1988)]; phenothiazine derivatives; such antiparasitic drugs as chloroquine and suramin; antiinflammatory drugs like gold sodium thiomalate; and cardiotonic drugs like sulmazol [Schneider (1992) Arch. Toxicol. 66:23-33]. Side-effects to these drugs can be caused by their lysosomotropic properties. In addition to drugs, other compounds to which man and animals are exposed (e.g., metals, cytostatics, vitamins, hormones) are also lysosomotropic. Liver cells, especially Kuppfer cells, are known to accumulate lysosomotropic agents. Here we review studies which evaluate lysosomal changes in the liver following administration of lysosomotropic agents to experimental animals, and relate them to toxic side-effects or pharmacological action, as was suggested by de Duve et al. (1974). Common features of lysosomal changes include, the overload of liver lysosomes by non-digestable material; increased size and number of liver lysosomes; inhibition of several lysosomal enzymes; secondary increase in the activity of some lysosomal enzymes; increased autophagy, and fusion disturbances. There was no significant change in endocytosis, except for an increase in the Triton WR 1339 model. (C) 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:253 / 275
页数:23
相关论文
共 43 条
  • [31] Utilization of Causal Reasoning of Hepatic Gene Expression in Rats to Identify Molecular Pathways of Idiosyncratic Drug-Induced Liver Injury
    Laifenfeld, Daphna
    Qiu, Luping
    Swiss, Rachel
    Park, Jennifer
    Macoritto, Michael
    Will, Yvonne
    Younis, Husam S.
    Lawton, Michael
    TOXICOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2014, 137 (01) : 234 - 248
  • [32] A novel near-infrared fluorescent light-up probe for tumor imaging and drug-induced liver injury detection
    Zeng, Xiaodong
    Chen, Ziyang
    Tang, Lin
    Yang, Han
    Liu, Nan
    Zhou, Hui
    Li, Yang
    Wu, Junzhu
    Deng, Zixin
    Yu, Yi
    Deng, Hai
    Hong, Xuechuan
    Xiao, Yuling
    CHEMICAL COMMUNICATIONS, 2019, 55 (17) : 2541 - 2544
  • [33] MicroRNA-29a-3p Prevents Drug-Induced Acute Liver Failure through Inflammation-Related Pyroptosis Inhibition
    Xiang, Dan-dan
    Liu, Jing-tao
    Zhong, Zi-biao
    Xiong, Yan
    Kong, Hong-yan
    Yu, Hai-jing
    Peng, Ting
    Huang, Jia-quan
    CURRENT MEDICAL SCIENCE, 2023, 43 (03) : 456 - 468
  • [34] A Drug-Induced Hybrid Electrospun Poly-Capro-Lactone: Cell-Derived Extracellular Matrix Scaffold for Liver Tissue Engineering
    Grant, Rhiannon
    Hay, David C.
    Callanan, Anthony
    TISSUE ENGINEERING PART A, 2017, 23 (13-14) : 650 - 662
  • [35] A new human autologous hepatocyte/macrophage co-culture system that mimics drug-induced liver injury-like inflammation
    Zimmermann, Andrea
    Scheffschick, Andrea
    Haensel, Rene
    Borchardt, Hannes
    Liu, Jia Li
    Ehnert, Sabrina
    Schicht, Gerda
    Seidemann, Lena
    Aigner, Achim
    Schiffmann, Susanne
    Nuessler, Andreas
    Seehofer, Daniel
    Damm, Georg
    ARCHIVES OF TOXICOLOGY, 2025, 99 (03) : 1167 - 1185
  • [36] Perturbations in human bile acid profiles following drug-induced liver injury investigated using semitargeted high-resolution mass spectrometry
    Mireault, Myriam
    Rose, Christopher F.
    Karvellas, Constantine J.
    Sleno, Lekha
    RAPID COMMUNICATIONS IN MASS SPECTROMETRY, 2024, 38 (09)
  • [37] Diagnostic potential of serum miR-532-3p as a circulating biomarker for experimental intrinsic drug-induced liver injury by acetaminophen and cisplatin in rats
    Hwang, Da-Bin
    Seo, Yoojin
    Lee, Eunji
    Won, Dong-hoon
    Kim, Changuk
    Kang, MinHwa
    Jeon, Young
    Kim, Hyung-Sik
    Park, Jun Won
    Yun, Jun-Won
    FOOD AND CHEMICAL TOXICOLOGY, 2023, 178
  • [38] The HepaRG cell line, a superior in vitro model to L-02, HepG2 and hiHeps cell lines for assessing drug-induced liver injury
    Wu, Yu
    Geng, Xing-chao
    Wang, Ju-feng
    Miao, Yu-fa
    Lu, Yan-li
    Li, Bo
    CELL BIOLOGY AND TOXICOLOGY, 2016, 32 (01) : 37 - 59
  • [39] Evaluating Drug-Induced Liver Injury and Its Remission via Discrimination and Imaging of HClO and H2S with a Two-Photon Fluorescent Probe
    Jiao, Xiaoyun
    Xiao, Yongsheng
    Li, Yong
    Liang, Muwen
    Xie, Xilei
    Wang, Xu
    Tang, Bo
    ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 2018, 90 (12) : 7510 - 7516
  • [40] Characterization of release profile of ornithine carbamoyltransferase from primary rat hepatocytes treated with hepatotoxic drugs: Implications for its unique potential as a drug-induced liver injury biomarker
    Furihata, Tomomi
    Aizawa, Takayuki
    Koibuchi, Akira
    Zhu, Meiyan
    Yamasaki, Yuki
    Shibuya, Minaka
    Chiba, Kan
    DRUG METABOLISM AND PHARMACOKINETICS, 2016, 31 (01) : 102 - 105