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Featured researches published by Dietmar Utesch.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 1992

Characterization of cryopreserved rat liver parenchymal cells by metabolism of diagnostic substrates and activities of related enzymes.

Dietmar Utesch; Bernd Diener; Elvira Molitor; Franz Oesch; Karl-Ludwig Platt

The metabolism of testosterone and benzo(a)pyrene (BaP) which is mediated by diverse enzymes was determined in cryopreserved rat liver parenchymal cells and compared with that found in freshly isolated cells. In addition, the activities of single xenobiotic-metabolizing enzymes were measured by using specific substrates. The cytochrome P450 (P450)-mediated total metabolic conversion of testosterone was reduced to 55% in cryopreserved cells. The metabolite profile, i.e. the formation of single metabolites compared with total metabolic conversion, was however unchanged when compared with freshly isolated cells. A concomitant reduction in the activities of the involved P450 isoenzymes can therefore be postulated. The amount of detected phase I-metabolites of BaP was unaffected by the cryopreservation method. The formation of phase II-metabolites and total metabolic conversion of BaP in cryopreserved cells was however reduced to about 50-60%. The reduced glutathione S-transferase and more obviously phenol sulfotransferase activities measured in cryopreserved cells, may explain the impaired conjugation of BaP. The ratio between phase I- and phase II-metabolites was thus changed by cryopreservation. Density separation on Percoll yielded cryopreserved cells with a viability and metabolic capacity not measurably different from freshly isolated cells. To this extent, cryopreserved, Percoll-purified liver parenchymal cells are a useful in vitro system for drug metabolism studies. However due to the extensive loss in cell number during this procedure (recovery = 22% of freshly isolated cells) the application of this system is limited.


In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology – Plant | 1991

DIFFERENTIAL STABILIZATION OF CYTOCHROME P-450 ISOENZYMES IN PRIMARY CULTURES OF ADULT RAT LIVER PARENCHYMAL CELLS

Dietmar Utesch; Elvira Molitor; Karl-Ludwig Platt; Franz Oesch

SummaryCytochrome P-450 dependent hydroxylation of testosterone was measured in 7-day-old cultures of primary rat liver parenchymal cells. Determinations were carried out in monocultures of parenchymal cells and co-cultures of parenchymal cells with rat liver nonparenchymal epithelial cells, or mouse embryo fibroblasts.In the monoculture system, testosterone metabolism was drastically reduced and hardly measurable after 7 days in culture. In the co-culture systems, individual P-450 isoenzymes were stabilized on different levels. P-450sp and presumablyc were well preserved, P-450a was reduced but clearly measurable, P-450h was totally lost whereas P-450sb ande were not measurable after 7 days (the activities of these isoenzymes however were already low in freshly isolated parenchymal cells). The results were independent of the cell line used for co-cultivation and of the method of parenchymal cell isolation, that is whether collagenase or EDTA was used as the agent for dissociating the cells from the liver. The results showed that the co-cultivation of liver parenchymal cells with other nonparenchymal cells significantly improved the differentiated status of the former. In this cell culture system however, not every parameter was equally well stabilized.


In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology – Plant | 1992

Dependency of the in vitro stabilization of differentiated functions in liver parenchymal cells on the type of cell line used for co-culture

Dietmar Utesch; Franz Oesch

SummaryThe differentiation status in cultures of primary rat liver parenchymal cells was determined by measuring the activities of various xenobiotic metabolizing enzymes. Most enzyme activities dropped rather rapidly in monocultures of parenchymal cells. The protein content and the activities of cytosolic epoxide hydrolase, glutathione S-transferase, andα-naphthol UDP-glucuronosyl transferase were, however, well stabilized in 7-day-old co-cultures of parenchymal cells with two different lines of rat liver nonparenchymal epithelial cells (NEC1 and NEC2). Phenol sulfotransferase and microsomal epoxide hydrolase activity were reduced in this coculture system after 7 days to about 30 and 20% of the initial activity. Generally, higher enzyme activities were measured in co-cultures with one specific epithelial cell line (NEC2) as compared to those with the other line (NEC1). C3H 10T1/2 mouse embryo fibroblasts supported the parenchymal cells even better than the two epithelial lines, because the activity of microsomal epoxide hydrolase was also stabilized. Glutathione transferase activity was increased over time in this co-culture system. Our results show that the differentiation status of liver parenchymal cells was much better stabilized in co-cultures than in monocultures but that, depending on the type of cells used for co-culture, great quantitative differences existed. The entire pattern of xenobiotic metabolizing enzyme activities could not be stabilized at the kind of levels found in freshly isolated parenchymal cells.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1989

Regio- and stereoselective regulation of monooxygenase activities by isoenzyme-selective phosphorylation of cytochrome P450

B. Bartlomowicz; Thomas Friedberg; Dietmar Utesch; Elvira Molitor; Karl-Ludwig Platt; Franz Oesch

The phosphorylation of the two major phenobarbital-inducible cytochrome P450 isoenzymes IIB1 and IIB2 was increased in hepatocytes by the action of the membrane permeating cAMP derivatives N6-dibutyryl-cAMP and 8-thiomethyl-cAMP. Under these conditions the dealkylation of 7-pentoxyresorufin, a selective substrate of cytochrome P450IIB1 and P450IIB2 was markedly reduced. 16 beta-Hydroxylation of testosterone which is catalyzed specifically only by cytochrome P450IIB1 and IIB2 was strongly reduced; for 16 alpha-hydroxylation which is also catalyzed by cytochrome P450IIB1 and IIB2 but additionally by 3 further cytochrome P450 isoenzymes, this reduction was less pronounced; for the oxidation of the 17 beta-hydroxyl group which besides cytochromes P450IIB1 and IIB2 is additionally catalyzed not only by other cytochromes P450 but also by 17 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase there was a clear tendency of reduction which, however, no longer reached statistical significance. Hydroxylation at other positions of testosterone which are catalyzed by other cytochrome P450 isoenzymes were not significantly changed. Hence isoenzyme-selective phosphorylation of cytochrome P450 leads to a corresponding isoenzyme-selective modulation of monooxygenase activity which holds promise to be especially important as a fast regulation of the control of genotoxic metabolites.


Mutation Research Letters | 1990

Mutagenicity experiments on l-cysteine and d-penicillamine using V79 cells as indicators and for metabolic activation

Hansruedi Glatt; Dietmar Utesch; Manfred Herbst; Franz Oesch

Previous studies have shown that cysteine and penicillamine induce gene mutations in Salmonella typhimurium, the effect being strongly potentiated in the presence of mammalian tissue preparations. It has now been demonstrated that homogenate of V79 Chinese hamster cells is an efficient activator of thiol amino acids as well. Nevertheless, L-cysteine and D-penicillamine did not induce gene mutations (acquisition of resistance towards 6-thioguanine) in V79 cells. This was true even in the presence of the most efficient activating system, kidney postmitochondrial fraction. The result suggests the existence of an effective protective system in mammalian cells against the natural amino acid L-cysteine and its therapeutically used derivative, D-penicillamine.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 1994

Gap junctional intercellular communication of cultured rat liver parenchymal cells is stabilized by epithelial cells and their isolated plasma membranes

Bernd Diener; N. Beer; Heike Dürk; Margarete Traiser; Dietmar Utesch; R. J. Wieser; Franz Oesch

The gap junctional intercellular communication (GJIC) determined by measuring dye coupling with Lucifer yellow, decreased within 3 d from 66% to 28% in monocultures of rat liver parenchymal cells. Coculturing of the parenchymal cells with a nonparenchymal epithelial cell line from rat liver resulted in increased and stabilized intercellular communication (83% after 3 d). The presence of isolated plasma membrane vesicles of the nonparenchymal epithelial cells also stabilized the intercellular communication between the liver parenchymal cells (70% after 3 d). When liver parenchymal cells were cocultured with a rat liver fibroblast cell line the gap junctional communication between the parenchymal cells was not stabilized (43% after 3 d), and isolated plasma membrane vesicles of the fibroblast were also unable to support the GJIC in parenchymal cells (35% after 3 d). It is concluded that plasma membrane constituents of the nonparenchymal epithelial cells were responsible for the stabilization of the GJIC between parenchymal cells. A heterotypic gap junctional communication between parenchymal and nonparenchymal cells was not observed.


Human & Experimental Toxicology | 1990

Toxicological Implications of Enzymatic Control of Reactive Metabolites

Franz Oesch; J. Doehmer; Thomas Friedberg; Hansruedi Glatt; Barbara Oesch-Bartlomowicz; Karl-Ludwig Platt; Pablo Steinberg; Dietmar Utesch; Helmut Thomas

Many foreign compounds are transformed into reactive metabolites, which may produce genotoxic effects by chemically altering critical biomolecules. Reactive metabolites are under the control of activating, inactivating and precursor sequestering enzymes. Such enzymes are under the long-term control of induction and repression, as well as the short-term control of post-translational modification and low molecular weight activators or inhibitors. In addition, the efficiency of these enzyme systems in preventing reactive metabolite-mediated toxicity is directed by their subcellular compartmentalization and isoenzymic multiplicity. Extrapolation from toxicological test systems to the human requires information of these variables in the system in question and in man. Differences in susceptibility to toxic challenges between species and individuals are often causally linked to differences in these control factors.


In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology – Animal | 1995

The gap junctional intercellular communication is no prerequisite for the stabilization of xenobiotic metabolizing enzyme activities in primary rat liver parenchymal cells in vitro.

Margarete Traiser; Bernd Diener; Dietmar Utesch; Franz Oesch

SummaryIn primary monocultures of adult rat liver parenchymal cells (PC), the activities of the xenobiotic metabolizing enzymes microsomal epoxide hydrolase (mEHb), soluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH), glutathione S-transferases (GST), and phenolsulfotransferase (ST) were reduced after 7 d to values below 33% of the initial activities. Furthermore, the gap junctional intercellular communication (GJIC), measured after microinjection by dye transfer, decreased from 90% on Day 1 to undetectable values after 5 d in monoculture. Co-culture of PC with nonparenchymal rat liver epithelial cells (NEC) increased (98% on Day 1) and stabilized (82% on Day 7) the homotypic GJIC of PC. Additionally, most of the measured xenobiotic metabolizing enzyme activities were well stabilized over 1 wk in co-culture. Because GJIC is one of several mechanisms playing an important role in cell differentiation, the importance of GJIC for the stabilization of xenobiotic metabolizing enzymes in PC was investigated. PC in monoculture were, therefore, treated with 2% dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), a differentiation promoting factor, and 1,1,1-trichloro-2,2,-bis (p-chlorophenyl) ethane (DDT) (10 µg/ml), a liver tumor promotor and inhibitor of GJIC, was given to co-cultures of PC with NEC. DMSO significantly stabilized (68% on Day 7), while DDT significantly inhibited (8% on Day 7) homotypic GJIC of PC in the respective culture systems. In contrast, the activities of mEHb, sEH, GST, and ST were not affected in the presence of DMSO or DDT. These results lead to the assumption that the differentiation parameters measured in this study (i.e., homotypic GJIC and the activities of xenobiotic metabolizing enzymes) are independently regulated in adult rat liver PC.


Archive | 1995

Use of Mechanistic Information for Adequate Metabolic Design of Genotoxicity Studies and Toxicological Interactions of Drugs and Environmental Chemicals

Franz Oesch; F. Fähndrich; Hansruedi Glatt; Barbara Oesch-Bartlomowicz; Karl-Ludwig Platt; Dietmar Utesch

Microorganisms as well as mammalian cells used for mutagenicity investigations have little or no activities for metabolism of premutagens and precarcinogens, i.e. of compounds ultimately leading to mutations and cancer but first requiring metabolic activation. Therefore, to such cells an exogenous activating system is added, generally the postmitochondrial supernatant fraction of the liver homogenate and a NADPH-generating system (Ames et al. 1976). In this situation enzymes requiring cofactors other than NADP(H) are unlikely to be active. Thus, this metabolic system is rather artificial. Monooxygenases are active in this system. They, for example, convert polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons to epoxides. These epoxides may be substrates for epoxide hydrolase, an enzyme which is also active in the test system because it requires no cofactor. The resulting diols may be further metabolized by monooxygenases to diol epoxides that are potent mutagens and carcinogens (Conney 1982). On the other hand, enzymes for conjugation reactions by which precursors of the ultimate mutagens could be sequestered are inactive, due to the low concentrations of their cofactors.


Cryobiology | 1993

A Method for the Cryopreservation of Liver Parenchymal Cells for Studies of Xenobiotics

Blend Diener; Dietmar Utesch; Nicole Beer; Heike Dürk; Franz Oesch

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