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Title: Dose-dependent up-regulation of rat pulmonary, renal, and hepatic cytochrome P-450 (CYP) 1A expression by nicotine feeding. Author: Iba MM, Fung J, Pak YW, Thomas PE, Fisher H, Sekowski A, Halladay AK, Wagner GC. Journal: Drug Metab Dispos; 1999 Sep; 27(9):977-82. PubMed ID: 10460794. Abstract: In a previous study in which a single 2.5 mg/kg (15.4 micromol/kg) s. c. dose of nicotine effected a transient, lung-specific induction of cytochrome P-450 (CYP) 1A1 in the rat, a dose-response study and assessment of the lung specificity of the induction was limited by toxicity of the acute parenteral nicotine exposure. In the present study, we examined the dose-CYP1A1/2 induction response relationship and the tissue specificity of the induction by orally administered nicotine, which lacks the toxicity of the parenterally administered drug. Nicotine, administered in a nutritionally balanced liquid diet, at a level of 20 (low), 60 (medium), or 200 (high) mg/kg of diet, induced CYP1A1 in the lung and kidney in a dose-dependent manner and in the liver at the high nicotine dose only, whereas CYP1A2 was induced in the liver dose-dependently and in the kidney at the high nicotine dose only. The high nicotine dose up-regulated mRNA level in the three tissues examined, but with the lung being the most responsive to the up-regulation. Induction of the CYP1A1-preferential activity ethoxyresorufin O-deethylase by the low, medium, and high nicotine diets was 1.9-, 4.9-, and 21.6-fold, respectively, in the lung, 1.4-, 1.7-, and 15.9-fold, respectively, in the kidney, and 1.7-, 2.9-, and 5.1-fold, respectively, in the liver. Similarly, albeit to lower extents, the dietary alkaloid induced the CYP1A2-preferential activity methoxyresorufin O-demethylase in all three tissues dose-dependently. Plasma nicotine concentration correlated neither with the dietary nor intake dose of the alkaloid nor with tissue levels of CYP1A, especially with the high-dose diet. Plasma nicotine levels at which CYP1A induction was maximal were comparable to those reported in smokers, suggesting that nicotine may induce CYP1A1 in humans.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]