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Vol. 293, Issue 3, 1027-1033, June 2000
Laboratories of Biochemistry, University of Pennsylvania School of
Veterinary Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
For more than 20 years it has been known that neonatal exposure to
phenobarbital results in a delayed, but permanent overexpression of
drug-metabolizing enzymes in adult male and female rats. Accordingly, to identify the specific isoform(s) of P450 responsible for the imprinted overexpression of hepatic monooxygenases, we have monitored the developmental profile of some dozen hepatic P450 isoforms in 4- to
150-day-old male and female rats neonatally treated with the
barbiturate. Some of the cytochrome P450s (CYP), i.e., CYP2A1, 2A2,
2C6, 3A1, and 3A2, exhibit the typical transient response in which
isoform levels (mRNA, protein, and/or specific catalytic activity) rise
precipitously at the time of phenobarbital administration and rapidly
decline to preinduction levels after withdrawal of the barbiturate.
Other isoforms, i.e., CYP1A1, 1A2, 2C7, 2C11, 2C12, and 2C13, were
neither constitutively expressed nor phenobarbital inducible in the
neonate. Only one of these isoforms, female predominant (M:F,~1:2)
CYP2C7, exhibited a barbiturate-induced delayed, but persistent ~30
to 50% overexpression from puberty through adulthood. We propose that
at the time of exposure, neonatally administered phenobarbital produces
a "silent" programming defect resulting in a delayed, but
persistent overexpression of the isoform, contributing, at least in
part, to a permanent elevation of hepatic drug-metabolizing enzyme activities.
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