Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8539056 | Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2018 | 43 Pages |
Abstract
Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) has been the most frequent cause of post-marketing drug withdrawals in the last 50Â years. The multifactorial nature of events that precede severe liver injury in human patients is difficult to model in rodents due to a variety of confounding or contributing factors that include disease state, concurrent medications, and translational species differences. In retrospective analyses, a consistent risk factor for DILI has been the inhibition of the Bile Salt Export Pump (BSEP). One compound known for potent BSEP inhibition and severe DILI is troglitazone. The purpose of the current study is to determine if serum profiling of 19 individual bile acids by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC/MS) can detect perturbations in bile acid homeostasis in rats after acute intravenous (IV) administration of vehicle or 5, 25, or 50Â mg/kg troglitazone. Minimal serum transaminase elevations (approximately two-fold) were observed with no evidence of microscopic liver injury. However, marked changes in individual serum bile acids occurred, with dose-dependent increases in the majority of the bile acids profiled. When compared to predose baseline values, tauromuricholic acid and taurocholic acid had the most robust increase in serum levels and dynamic range, with a maximum fold increase from baseline of 34-fold and 29-fold, respectively. Peak bile acid increases occurred within 2Â hours (h) after dosing and returned to baseline values before 24Â h. In conclusion, serum bile acid profiling can potentially identify a mechanistic risk of clinical DILI that could be poorly detected by traditional toxicity endpoints.
Keywords
BSEPtaurohyodeoxycholic acidTBILIAMCATaurochenodeoxycholateMDCATaurodeoxycholateAUClastNtcpUDCACDCAALTDCACmaxGGTTBALC/MSt1/2VSsaspartate amino transferaseASTDrug-induced liver injuryAlanine Amino TransferaseLCAChenodeoxycholic acidDeoxycholic acidTauroursodeoxycholic acidTaurolithocholic acidTaurocholic acidLithocholic acidHyodeoxycholic acidCholic acidGlycochenodeoxycholic acidBile acidstotal bile acidsUrsodeoxycholic acidDirect bilirubinclearancevolume of distribution at steady stateIntravenousDILIHepatotoxicityLiquid chromatography-mass spectrometryBiomarkersHalf-lifesodium taurocholate cotransporting polypeptideBile salt export pumptotal bilirubingamma glutamyl transferaseGlycocholate
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Authors
Steven Cepa, David Potter, Lisa Wong, Leah Schutt, Jacqueline Tarrant, Jodie Pang, Xiaolin Zhang, Roxanne Andaya, Laurent Salphati, Yingqing Ran, Le An, Ryan Morgan, Jonathan Maher,