@phdthesis{Adler2012, author = {Adler, Melanie}, title = {New approaches to improve prediction of drug-induced liver injury}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-69512}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2012}, abstract = {Das h{\"a}ufige Scheitern neuer Arzneistoffkandidaten aufgrund von Lebertoxizit{\"a}t in pr{\"a}klinischen und klinischen Studien stellt ein erhebliches Problem in der Entwicklung von neuen Arzneimitteln dar. Deshalb ist es wichtig, neue Ans{\"a}tze zu entwickeln, mit deren Hilfe unerw{\"u}nschte Wirkungen von Arzneimitteln fr{\"u}her und zuverl{\"a}ssiger erkannt werden k{\"o}nnen. Um die Vorhersage von Lebertoxizit{\"a}t in pr{\"a}klinischen Studien zu verbessern, wurden im Rahmen dieser Arbeit zwei wesentliche Ans{\"a}tze gew{\"a}hlt: 1) die Evaluierung neuer Biomarker, durch die Lebertoxizit{\"a}t zuverl{\"a}ssiger und empfindlicher detektiert werden k{\"o}nnte und 2.) wirkmechanistische Untersuchungen mittels Toxcicogenomics f{\"u}r ein besseres Verst{\"a}ndnis der zugrunde liegenden Mechanismen der Arzneimittel-induzierten Toxizit{\"a}t. Ein Ziel dieser Arbeit war, die F{\"a}higkeit einiger neuer potenzieller Biomarker (NGAL, Thiostatin, Clusterin und PON1) zu bewerten, Arzmeimittel-induzierte Lebertoxizit{\"a}t in Ratten fr{\"u}hzeitig zu erkennen. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass PON1 und Clusterin infolge eines durch die verabreichten Arzneistoffkandidaten verursachten Leberschadens nicht konsistent ver{\"a}ndert waren. Diese beiden Marker sind daher, verglichen mit bestehenden klinisch-chemischen Markern, nicht f{\"u}r eine sichere Vorhersage von Arzneistoff-induzierten Lebersch{\"a}den geeignet. Bei Thiostatin und NGAL zeigte sich hingegen ein zeit- und dosisabh{\"a}ngiger Anstieg im Serum und Urin behandelter Tiere. Diese Ver{\"a}nderungen, die gut mit der mRNA Expression im Zielorgan {\"u}bereinstimmten, korrelierten mit dem Schweregrad der Arzneistoff-induzierten Lebersch{\"a}den. Die Analyse mittels ROC zeigte, Thiostatin im Serum, nicht aber NGAL, ein besserer Indikator f{\"u}r Arzneimittel-induzierte hepatobili{\"a}re Sch{\"a}den ist als die routinem{\"a}ßig verwendeten klinische-chemischen Marker, wie z.B. die Leberenzyme ALP, ALT und AST. Thiostatin wird jedoch als Akute-Phase-Protein in einer Vielzahl von Geweben exprimiert und kann somit nicht spezifisch als Lebermarker betrachtet werden. Dennoch zeigen unsere Ergebnisse, dass Thiostatin als sensitiver, minimal-invasiver diagnostischer Marker f{\"u}r Entz{\"u}ndungsprozesse und Gewebesch{\"a}den eine sinnvolle Erg{\"a}nzung in der pr{\"a}klinischen Testung auf Lebertoxizit{\"a}t darstellt. Im zweiten Teil dieser Arbeit wurde mittels RNA-Interferenz das pharmakologische Target des Arzneistoffkandidaten BAY16, der Glukagonrezeptor, auf mRNA-Ebene gehemmt und anhand von Genexpressionsanalysen untersucht, ob die pharmakologisch-bedingte Modulation des Glukagonrezeptors eine Rolle in der Toxizit{\"a}t von BAY16 spielt. Desweiteren sollten diese Arbeiten Aufschluss geben, welche molekularen Ver{\"a}nderungen auf die pharmakologische Wirkung des Arzneistoffs zur{\"u}ckzuf{\"u}hren sind, und daher f{\"u}r den Mechanismus der Toxizit{\"a}t m{\"o}glicherweise wenig relevant sind. W{\"a}hrend BAY16 in Konzentrationen von 75 µM starke zytotoxische Wirkungen aufwies, hatte die siRNA vermittelte Depletion des Glukagonrezeptors keinen Einfluss auf die Vitalit{\"a}t prim{\"a}rer Rattenhepatozyten. Daraus l{\"a}sst sich ableiten, dass die Hepatotoxizi{\"a}t von BAY16 in vitro und in vivo nicht mit der pharmakologischen Modulation des Glukagonrezeptors assoziiert ist. Diese Ergebnisse wurden durch die Tatsache gest{\"u}tzt, dass die meisten der durch BAY16 induzierten Genexpressionsver{\"a}nderungen unabh{\"a}ngig von der pharmakologischen Modulation des Glucagonrezeptors auftraten. Diese beobachteten off-target-Effekte beinhalteten Ver{\"a}nderungen im Fremdstoffmetabolismus, oxidativer Stress, erh{\"o}hte Fetts{\"a}uresynthese und Ver{\"a}nderungen im Cholesterol- und Gallens{\"a}uremetabolismus. Obwohl Ver{\"a}nderungen in diesen molekularen Mechanismen zum Fortschreiten eines Leberschadens beitragen k{\"o}nnen, ist es anhand dieser Daten nicht m{\"o}glich einen eindeutigen Mechanismus f{\"u}r die Toxizit{\"a}t von BAY16 abzuleiten. In dieser Arbeit konnte jedoch gezeigt werden, dass die Anwendung der siRNA-Technologie einen neuen methodischen Ansatz darstellt, um Mechanismen arzneimittelbedingter Toxizit{\"a}t besser verstehen zu k{\"o}nnen.}, subject = {Biomarker}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Moro2011, author = {Moro, Sabrina}, title = {Identification of target proteins of furan reactive metabolites in rat liver}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-57617}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2011}, abstract = {Furan was recently found to be present in a variety of food items that undergo heat treatment. It is known to act as a potent hepatotoxin and liver carcinogen in rodents. In a 2-year bioassay, chronic furan administration to rats was shown to cause hepatocellular adenomas and carcinomas and very high incidences of cholangiocarcinomas even at the lowest furan dose tested (2.0 mg/kg bw). However, the mechanisms of furan-induced tumor formation are poorly understood. Furan is metabolized by cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes, predominantly CYP2E1, to its major metabolite cis-2-butene-1,4-dial (BDA). BDA is thought to be the key mediator of furan toxicity and carcinogenicity and was shown to react with cellular nucleophiles such as nucleosides and amino acid residues in vitro. It is well known that covalent protein binding may lead to cytotoxicity, but the cellular mechanisms involved remain to be elucidated. Since covalent binding of reactive intermediates to a target protein may result in loss of protein function and subsequent damage to the cell, the aim of this study was to identify furan target proteins to establish their role in the pathogenesis of furan-associated liver toxicity and carcinogenicity. In order to identify target proteins of furan reactive metabolites, male F344/N rats were administered [3,4-14C]-furan. Liquid scintillation counting of protein extracts revealed a dose-dependent increase of radioactivity covalently bound to liver proteins. After separation of the liver protein extracts by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and subsequent detection of radioactive spots by fluorography, target proteins of reactive furan intermediates were identified by mass spectrometry and database search via Mascot. A total of 61 putative target proteins were consistently found to be adducted in 3 furan-treated rats. The identified proteins represent - among others - enzymes, transport proteins, structural proteins and chaperones. Pathway mapping tools revealed that target proteins are predominantly located in the cytosol and mitochondria and participate in glucose metabolism, mitochondrial β-oxidation of fatty acids, and amino acid degradation. These findings together with the fact that ATP synthase β subunit was also identified as a putative target protein strongly suggest that binding of furan reactive metabolites to proteins may result in mitochondrial injury, impaired cellular energy production, and altered redox state, which may contribute to cell death. Moreover, several proteins involved in the regulation of redox homeostasis represent putative furan target proteins. Loss of function of these proteins by covalent binding of furan reactive metabolites may impair cellular defense mechanisms against oxidative stress, which may also result in cell death. Besides the potential malfunction of whole pathways due to loss of functions of several participating proteins, loss of function of individual proteins which are involved in various cellular processes such as transport processes across the mitochondrial membranes, cell signaling, DNA methylation, blood coagulation, and bile acid transport may also contribute to furan-induced cytotoxicity and carcinogenicity. Covalent binding of reactive metabolites to cellular proteins may result in accumulation of high amounts of unfolded or damaged proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In response to this ER stress, the cell can activate the unfolded protein response (UPR) to repair or degrade damaged proteins. To address whether binding of furan reactive metabolites to cellular proteins triggers activation of the UPR, semiquantitative PCR and TaqMan® real-time PCR were performed. In the case of UPR activation, semiquantitative PCR should show enhanced splicing of X-box binding protein-1 (XBP1) mRNA (transcription factor and key regulator of the UPR) and TaqMan® real-time PCR should determine an increased expression of UPR target genes. However, our data showed no evidence for activation of the UPR in the livers of rats treated either with a single hepatotoxic dose or with a known carcinogenic dose for 4 weeks. This suggests either that furan administration does not induce ER stress through accumulation of damaged proteins or that activation of the UPR is disrupted. Consistent with the latter, glucose-regulated protein 78 (GRP78), identified as a target protein in our study, represents an important mediator involved in activation of the UPR whose inhibition was shown to impair induction of the UPR. Thus, adduct formation and inactivation of GRP78 by furan metabolites may disturb activation of the UPR. In addition to impaired activation of UPR, protein repair and degradation functions may be altered, because several proteins involved in these processes also represent target proteins of furan and thus may show impaired functionality. Taken together...}, subject = {Furan}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Sieber2009, author = {Sieber, Maximilian}, title = {Evaluation of 1H-NMR and GC/MS-based metabonomics for the assessment of liver and kidney toxicity}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-43052}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2009}, abstract = {For the assessment of metabonomics techniques for the early, non-invasive detection of toxicity, the nephrotoxins gentamicin (s.c. administration of 0, 60 and 120 mg/kg bw 2x daily for 8 days), ochratoxin A (p.o. administration of 0, 21, 70 and 210 µg/kg bw 5 days/week for 90 days) and aristolochic acid (p.o. administration of 0, 0.1, 1.0 and 10 mg/kg bw for 12 days) were administered to rats and urine samples were analyzed with 1H-NMR and GC/MS. Urine samples from the InnoMed PredTox project were analyzed as well, thereby focusing on 1H-NMR analysis and bile duct necrosis as histopathological endpoint. 1H-NMR analysis used water supression with the following protocol: 1 M phosphate buffer, D2O as shift lock reagent, D4-trimethylsilyl­propionic acid as chemical shift reference, noesygppr1d pulse sequence (Bruker). For multivariate data analysis, spectral intensity was binned into 0.04 ppm wide bins. GC/MS analysis of urine was carried out after protein precipitation with methanol, drying, derivatization with methoxyamine hydrochloride in pyridine and with methyl(trimethylsilyl)­trifluoroacetamide on a DB5-MS column using EI ionization. The chromatograms were prepared for multivariate data analysis using the R-program based peak picking and alignment software XCMS version 2.4.0. Principal component analysis (PCA) to detect and visualize time-point and dose-dependent differences between treated animals and controls and orthogonal projection to latent structures discriminant analysis (OPLS-DA) for identification of potential molecular markers of toxicity was carried out using SIMCA P+ 11.5 1H-NMR-based markers were identified and quantified with the Chenomx NMR Suite, GC/MS based markers were identified using the NIST Mass Spectral Database and by co-elution with authentic reference standards. PCA of urinary metabolite profiles was able to differentiate treated animals from controls at the same time as histopathology. An advantage over classical clinical chemistry parameters regarding sensitivity could be observed in some cases. Metabonomic analysis with GC/MS and 1H-NMR revealed alterations in the urinary profile of treated animals 1 day after start of treatment with gentamicin, correlating with changes in clinical chemistry parameters and histopathology. Decreased urinary excretion of citrate, 2-oxoglutarate, hippurate, trigonelline and 3-indoxylsulfate increased excretion of 5-oxoproline, lactate, alanine and glucose were observed. Ochratoxin A treatment caused decreased excretion of citrate, 2-oxoglutarate and hippurate and and increased excretion of glucose, myo-inositol, N,N-dimethylglycine, glycine, alanine and lactate as early as 2 weeks after start of treatment with 210µg OTA/kg bw, correlating with changes in clinical chemistry parameters and histopathology. Integration of histopathology scores increased confidence in the molecular markers discovered. Aristolochic acid treatment resulted in decreased urinary excretion of citrate, 2-oxoglutarate, hippurate and creatinine as well as increased excretion of 5-oxoproline, N,N-dimethylglycine, pseudouridine and uric acid. No alterations in clinical chemistry parameters or histopathology were noted.Decreased excretion of hippurate indicates alterations in the gut microflora, an effect that is expected as pharmacological action of the aminoglycoside antibiotic gentamicin and that can also be explained by the p.o. administration of xenobiotica. Decreased Krebs cycle intermediates (citrate and 2-oxoglutarate) and increased lactate is associated with altered energy metabolism. Increased pseudouridine excretion is associated with cell proliferation and was observed with aristolochic acid and ochratoxin A, for which proliferative processes were observed with histopathology. 5-oxoproline and N,N-dimethylglycine can be associated with oxidative stress. Glucose, a marker of renal damage in clinical chemistry, was observed for all three nephrotoxins studied. Single study analysis with PCA of GC/MS chromatograms and 1H-NMR spectra of urine from 3 studies conducted within the InnoMed PredTox project showing bile duct necrosis revealed alterations in urinary profiles with the onset of changes in clinical chemistry and histopathology. Alterations were mainly decreased Krebs cycle intermediates and changes in the aromatic gut flora metabolites, an effect that may result as a secondary effect from altered bile flow. In conclusion, metabonomics techniques are able to detect toxic lesions at the same time as histopathology and clinical chemistry. The metabolites found to be altered are common to most toxicities and are not organ-specific. A mechanistic link to the observed toxicity has to be established in order to avoid confounders such as body weight loss, pharmacological effects etc. For pattern recognition purposes, large databases are necessary.}, subject = {Toxikologie}, language = {en} }