May 21, 2018
Journal Article

High-fat diets alter the modulatory effects of xenobiotics on cytochrome P450 activities

Abstract

Cytochrome P450 monooxygenases (P450) are key to the metabolism of myriad endogenous chemicals and xenobiotics, including the majority of therapeutic drugs. Dysregulated P450 activities can lead to altered drug metabolism and toxicity, oxidative stress, and inflammation; all physiological states frequently charged as the impetus for various chronic pathologies. We characterized the impact of common xenobiotic exposures, specifically high-fat diet and active or passive cigarette smoke, on the functional capacity of hepatic and pulmonary P450s. We employed an activity-based protein profiling approach to characterize the identity and activity level of measured individual P450 isoforms. Our results confirm expectations of significant alterations in pulmonary P450s due to cigarette smoke, but now reveal the repressive impact of high-fat diet-induced obesity on many hepatic P450s activities, and the dynamic alterations due to concomitant diet and smoke exposures on liver and lung P450 activities impacting drug metabolism and pathways of inflammation.

Revised: April 10, 2020 | Published: May 21, 2018

Citation

Sadler N.C., B.M. Webb-Robertson, T. Clauss, J.G. Pounds, R.A. Corley, and A.T. Wright. 2018. High-fat diets alter the modulatory effects of xenobiotics on cytochrome P450 activities. Chemical Research in Toxicology 31, no. 5:308-318. PNNL-SA-126308. doi:10.1021/acs.chemrestox.8b00008