TY - JOUR T1 - Immunosuppression induced by acute exposure to cocaine is dependent on metabolism by cytochrome P-450. JF - Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics JO - J Pharmacol Exp Ther SP - 1257 LP - 1265 VL - 276 IS - 3 AU - T C Jeong AU - S D Jordan AU - R A Matulka AU - E D Stanulis AU - S S Park AU - M P Holsapple Y1 - 1996/03/01 UR - http://jpet.aspetjournals.org/content/276/3/1257.abstract N2 - The primary objective of this paper was to characterize the role of metabolism in immunosuppression by acute exposure to cocaine. beta-Ionone has been used to study the role of metabolism in hepatotoxicity associated with acute exposure to cocaine, and was shown to produce a greater effect than other cytochrome P-450 (P-450) inducers. When beta-ionone (600 mg/kg s.c.) was pretreated 72 and 48 hr before the acute administration of cocaine (30 mg/kg i.p.) in B6C3F1 female mice, the antibody response to sheep red blood cells was significantly suppressed. Exposure to cocaine alone produced little or no suppression. The immunosuppression in cocaine + beta-ionone-treated mice was accompanied by a decrease in thymus weight and an increase in liver weight. Administration of metyrapone (40 mg/kg i.p.) 30 min before cocaine administration (40 mg/kg) blocked completely the suppression of the antibody response by cocaine in beta-ionone-pretreated mice. The reversal by metyrapone was additional evidence that a P-450 pathway was the critical metabolic pathway of cocaine to be immunosuppressive, and the inhibitory effect of metyrapone on cocaine N-demethylase was confirmed in liver microsomes. The inductive effects of beta-ionone were also characterized further. Cocaine N-demethylase activity was significantly induced by beta-ionone. The induction of P-450IIB1/2, the only isozyme shown previously to be associated with the hepatotoxicity by cocaine, was demonstrated by Western immunoblotting to be induced by beta-ionone at doses as low as 300 mg/kg; but was less than the induction associated with phenobarbital. Studies confirmed that acute exposure to cocaine also was immunosuppressive in phenobarbital-pretreated mice. Taken together, our present results suggest that the immunosuppression by acute exposure to cocaine is associated with the increased metabolism of cocaine to toxic metabolites by P-450, probably P-450IIB1/2, as demonstrated previously for its hepatotoxicity. ER -