Elliott S L, Morgan D J, Angus P W, Ghabrial H, Watson R G, Smallwood R A
University of Melbourne, Department of Medicine, Heidelberg Repatriation Hospital, Australia.
Biochem Pharmacol. 1993 Feb 9;45(3):573-8. doi: 10.1016/0006-2952(93)90129-k.
We investigated, using the single-pass isolated perfused rat liver preparation, whether the centrilobular location of hepatic oxidative drug metabolism could be a contributing factor to the marked sensitivity of drug oxidation to hypoxia. Livers (N = 7) were each perfused for 130 min with 2 micrograms/mL (+)-propranolol, a drug metabolized almost entirely by oxidation in the rat. The direction of flow was reversed after 60 min, the order of flow direction being randomized. Normal oxygenation was used during the first 30 min of antegrade and of retrograde perfusion, but in the second 30 min perfusate was equilibrated with a N2/O2 mixture designed to reduce hepatic oxygen delivery by half. During normal oxygenation there was no significant difference between antegrade and retrograde perfusion in hepatic oxygen delivery and physiological parameters such as oxygen consumption and extraction, perfusion pressure and bile flow. During hypoxia, mean oxygen delivery was slightly lower with retrograde perfusion (retrograde: mean = 2.37 mumol/min/g liver, range = 1.56-3.17; antegrade: mean = 2.90 mumol/min/g liver, range = 1.96-4.08; P = 0.04), but there was no significant difference in physiological parameters within each liver (P > 0.05). Propranolol clearance during normal oxygenation was similar to the perfusion rate (10 mL/min) and was the same for both directions of perfusion (antegrade 9.88 +/- 0.07 mL/min, retrograde 9.88 +/- 0.13 mL/min, P > 0.05). Hypoxia reduced propranolol clearance substantially, but the decrease was significantly greater with antegrade perfusion (5.65 +/- 1.89 mL/min) than with retrograde perfusion (6.76 +/- 1.95 mL/min, P = 0.014). Oxidative drug metabolism is located primarily in the centrilobular zone and sinusoidal oxygen concentration is lowest in the "downstream" zone with both antegrade and retrograde perfusion. These findings suggest that the centrilobular location of propranolol metabolism may influence the effect of hypoxia on propranolol elimination, but is not a major contributor to the marked sensitivity of propranolol elimination to hypoxia antegrade perfusion.
我们使用单通道离体灌注大鼠肝脏制备方法,研究了肝脏氧化药物代谢的小叶中心定位是否可能是药物氧化对缺氧显著敏感的一个促成因素。用2微克/毫升的(+)-普萘洛尔对7只大鼠的肝脏进行了130分钟的灌注,普萘洛尔在大鼠体内几乎完全通过氧化代谢。60分钟后血流方向逆转,血流方向顺序随机。在顺行和逆行灌注的前30分钟采用正常氧合,但在第二个30分钟,灌注液与一种旨在将肝脏氧输送减少一半的N₂/O₂混合物平衡。在正常氧合期间,顺行和逆行灌注在肝脏氧输送以及诸如氧消耗和摄取、灌注压力和胆汁流量等生理参数方面没有显著差异。在缺氧期间,逆行灌注时的平均氧输送略低(逆行:平均值 = 2.37微摩尔/分钟/克肝脏,范围 = 1.56 - 3.17;顺行:平均值 = 2.90微摩尔/分钟/克肝脏,范围 = 1.96 - 4.08;P = 0.04),但每个肝脏内的生理参数没有显著差异(P > 0.05)。正常氧合期间普萘洛尔清除率与灌注速率(10毫升/分钟)相似,且两个灌注方向相同(顺行9.88 ± 0.07毫升/分钟,逆行9.88 ± 0.13毫升/分钟,P > 0.05)。缺氧显著降低了普萘洛尔清除率,但顺行灌注时的降低幅度(5.65 ± 1.89毫升/分钟)明显大于逆行灌注(6.76 ± 1.95毫升/分钟,P = 0.014)。氧化药物代谢主要位于小叶中心区,并且在顺行和逆行灌注时,“下游”区的窦状隙氧浓度最低。这些发现表明,普萘洛尔代谢的小叶中心定位可能影响缺氧对普萘洛尔消除的作用,但不是普萘洛尔消除对顺行灌注缺氧显著敏感的主要促成因素。