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Title: Kinetics of inhibition of ethanol metabolism in rats and the rate-limiting role of alcohol dehydrogenase. Author: Plapp BV, Leidal KG, Smith RK, Murch BP. Journal: Arch Biochem Biophys; 1984 Apr; 230(1):30-8. PubMed ID: 6370140. Abstract: If liver alcohol dehydrogenase were rate-limiting in ethanol metabolism, inhibitors of the enzyme should inhibit the metabolism with the same type of kinetics and the same kinetic constants in vitro and in vivo. Against varied concentrations of ethanol, 4-methylpyrazole is a competitive inhibitor of purified rat liver alcohol dehydrogenase (Kis = 0.11 microM, in 83 mM potassium phosphate and 40 mM KCl buffer, pH 7.3, 37 degrees C) and is competitive in rats (with Kis = 1.4 mumol/kg). Isobutyramide is essentially an uncompetitive inhibitor of purified enzyme (Kii = 0.33 mM) and of metabolism in vivo (Kii = 1.0 mmol/kg). Low concentrations of both inhibitors decreased the rate of metabolism as a direct function of their concentrations. Qualitatively, therefore, alcohol dehydrogenase activity appears to be a major rate-limiting factor in ethanol metabolism. Quantitatively, however, the constants may not agree because of distribution in the animal or metabolism of the inhibitors. At saturating concentrations of inhibitors, ethanol is eliminated by inhibitor-insensitive pathways, at about 10% of the total rate at a dose of ethanol of 10 mmol/kg. Uncompetitive inhibitors of alcohol dehydrogenase should be especially useful for inhibiting the metabolism of alcohols since they are effective even at saturating levels of alcohol, in contrast to competitive inhibitors, whose action is overcome by saturation with alcohol.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]