Hepatobiliary Disposition of Thyroid Hormone in Mrp2-Deficient TR− Rats: Reduced Biliary Excretion of Thyroxine Glucuronide Does Not Prevent Xenobiotic-Induced Hypothyroidism
Author(s) -
Lloyd Lecureux,
Matthew Z. Dieter,
David M. Nelson,
Linda E. Watson,
Harvey Wong,
Brian Gemzik,
Curtis D. Klaassen,
Lois D. LehmanMcKeeman
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
toxicological sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.352
H-Index - 183
eISSN - 1096-6080
pISSN - 1096-0929
DOI - 10.1093/toxsci/kfp026
Subject(s) - endocrinology , medicine , glucuronide , xenobiotic , hormone , excretion , thyroid , multidrug resistance associated protein 2 , disposition , chemistry , metabolism , transporter , biochemistry , enzyme , atp binding cassette transporter , gene , psychology , social psychology
The hepatobiliary disposition of thyroxine (T4) was evaluated in Groningen Yellow transport deficient (TR(-)) rats lacking functional multidrug resistance-associated protein 2 (Mrp2; Abcc2). Male Wistar and TR(-) rats were dosed orally (4 days) with phenobarbital (PB; 100 mg/kg) or DMP 904 (200 mg/kg), after which T4 homeostasis and hepatic cytochromes P450, UDP-glucuronosyltransferase, xenobiotic transporters, and T4 glucuronidation were determined. Serum concentrations of T4 were approximately 50% higher in control TR(-) rats than Wistars. PB and DMP 904 increased hepatic levels of P450s and T4-glucuronidation (T4-G), and these changes were associated with decreased serum T4 levels in both strains. In Wistar but not TR(-) rats, DMP 904 increased thyroid stimulating hormone levels twofold. Hepatobiliary clearance of T4 was determined after intravenous infusion of [(125)I]T4 to rats dosed with PB and DMP 904 (4 days). PB and DMP 904 increased plasma clearance and hepatic uptake of [(125)I]T4 equivalents in Wistar but not TR(-) rats. Total biliary clearance (Cl(bile)) was approximately 0.85 and 0.2 ml/h in Wistar and TR(-) rats, respectively, with virtually no T4-G excreted in bile in TR(-) rats. Biliary clearance of unconjugated T4 was also lower in control TR(-) rats than in Wistars, although DMP 904 increased its biliary clearance in both strains. These results suggest that Mrp2 is likely to be responsible for biliary excretion of T4-G and contributes in part to excretion of T4. Decreased biliary clearance of T4 and metabolites in TR(-) rats mitigated but did not prevent drug-induced changes in serum T4, suggesting that other factors contribute to changes in T4 homeostasis in these rats.
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