
Species and sex differences in the inhibitory action of the corticosteroid alclometasone dipropionate on the hepatic drug-metabolizing system.
Author(s) -
Yasuhiro Nishibe,
Mitsuko Hamataka,
Toshiaki Hasegawa,
Jiro Ikeuchi,
Toshio Yoshizaki,
Akira Touchi,
Takashi Matsubara
Publication year - 1989
Publication title -
japanese journal of pharmacology/japanese journal of pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1347-3506
pISSN - 0021-5198
DOI - 10.1254/jjp.50.435
Subject(s) - endocrinology , medicine , drug , coumarin , pharmacology , chemistry , cytochrome p450 , androgen , demethylation , metabolism , biochemistry , gene expression , organic chemistry , hormone , dna methylation , gene
The effect of successive administration of the corticosteroid alclometasone dipropionate (ACM) on the hepatic drug-metabolizing system was examined using male and female rats. Although some pharmacological changes such as increases in plasma enzyme activity, lipid level and protein concentration appeared similarly in ACM-treated male and female rats, the activities of 7-alkoxycoumarin O-dealkylase, especially the O-depropylation activity, decreased dose-dependently by ACM administration only in male rats. ACM did not affect the hepatic drug-metabolizing activity in female rats and mice of both sexes. Also, ACM did not inhibit androgen-independent aniline hydroxylase activity even in male rats. The time course of changes of the drug-metabolizing system in male rats showed a rapid decrease in cytochrome P-450 content and O-depropylation activity following successive treatments with ACM, but there was a slow onset in the decreases of the O-demethylation and O-deethylation activities of 7-alkoxycoumarin. When ACM was withdrawn, the O-demethylation and O-deethylation activities rapidly returned to their control levels, while recovery of the O-depropylation activity was slow. These results suggested that ACM inhibits the hepatic drug-metabolizing enzyme activity associated with a specific form(s) of androgen-dependent cytochrome P-450 in male rats.