Nagaoka_2022_Biochem.Pharmacol_195_114842

Reference

Title : Arylacetamide deacetylase knockout mice are sensitive to ketoconazole-induced hepatotoxicity and adrenal insufficiency - Nagaoka_2022_Biochem.Pharmacol_195_114842
Author(s) : Nagaoka M , Fukami T , Kisui F , Yamada T , Sakai Y , Tashiro K , Ogiso T , Konishi K , Honda S , Hirosawa K , Nakano M , Nakajima M
Ref : Biochemical Pharmacology , 195 :114842 , 2022
Abstract :

Orally administered ketoconazole may rarely induce liver injury and adrenal insufficiency. A metabolite formed by arylacetamide deacetylase (AADAC)-mediated hydrolysis has been observed in cellulo studies, and it is relevant to ketoconazole-induced cytotoxicity. This study tried to examine the significance of AADAC in ketoconazole-induced toxicity in vivo using Aadac knockout mice. Oral administration of 150 mg/kg ketoconazole resulted in the area under the plasma concentration-time curve values of ketoconazole and N-deacetylketoconazole, a hydrolyzed metabolite of ketoconazole, in Aadac knockout mice being significantly higher and lower than those in wild-type mice, respectively. With the administration of ketoconazole (300 mg/kg/day) for 7 days, Aadac knockout mice showed higher mortality (100%) than wild-type mice (42.9%), and they also showed significantly higher plasma alanine transaminase and lower corticosterone levels, thus representing liver injury and steroidogenesis inhibition, respectively. It was suggested that a higher plasma ketoconazole concentration likely accounts for the inhibition of the synthesis of corticosterone, which has anti-inflammatory effects, in the adrenal gland in Aadac KO mice. In Aadac knockout mice, hepatic mRNA levels of immune- and inflammation-related factors were increased by the administration of 300 mg/kg ketoconazole, and the increase was restored by the replenishment of corticosterone (40 mg/kg, s.c.) along with recoveries of plasma alanine transaminase levels. In conclusion, Aadac defects exacerbate ketoconazole-induced liver injury by inhibiting glucocorticoid synthesis and enhancing the inflammatory response. This in vivo study revealed that the hydrolysis of ketoconazole by AADAC can mitigate ketoconazole-induced toxicities.

PubMedSearch : Nagaoka_2022_Biochem.Pharmacol_195_114842
PubMedID: 34798123
Gene_locus related to this paper: mouse-aryla

Related information

Substrate Ketoconazole
Gene_locus mouse-aryla

Citations formats

Nagaoka M, Fukami T, Kisui F, Yamada T, Sakai Y, Tashiro K, Ogiso T, Konishi K, Honda S, Hirosawa K, Nakano M, Nakajima M (2022)
Arylacetamide deacetylase knockout mice are sensitive to ketoconazole-induced hepatotoxicity and adrenal insufficiency
Biochemical Pharmacology 195 :114842

Nagaoka M, Fukami T, Kisui F, Yamada T, Sakai Y, Tashiro K, Ogiso T, Konishi K, Honda S, Hirosawa K, Nakano M, Nakajima M (2022)
Biochemical Pharmacology 195 :114842