Interactions of deoxynivalenol and lipopolysaccharides on cytotoxicity protein synthesis and metabolism of DON in porcine hepatocytes and Kupffer cell enriched hepatocyte cultures.

S. Doll, J.A. Schrickx, H. Valenta, S. Danicke, J. Fink-Gremmels

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    Abstract

    The cytotoxicity of deoxynivalenol (DON), effects on protein synthesis and albumin secretion was investigated in porcine hepatocytes and Kupffer cell-enriched hepatocyte cultures (co-cultures) in the presence and absence of lipopolysaccharides (LPS). Up to 16microM DON did not reduce the metabolic activity of hepatocytes. Lysosomal activity reacted more sensitively as neutral red uptake was decreased starting at 2 or 4microM DON irrespective of LPS exposure. The synthesis of secreted proteins was reduced to 31% and 42%, and of cellular proteins to 47% and 39%, in the absence and presence of LPS, respectively, when hepatocytes were exposed to 2microM DON. Reduced albumin secretion in response to DON was already observed after 3h in hepatocytes as well as co-cultures while LPS-mediated decrease was not evident until 24h, when interactions between DON and LPS resulted from a diminishing difference between LPS stimulated and non-stimulated cultures with increasing concentrations of DON. All observed effects may be biased by the cells' ability to conjugate DON to glucuronic acid as 54% and 64% of DON administered at 5nM were recovered as conjugates after 48h. Glucuronidation rate, as well as total DON recovery, decreased with increasing concentrations of DON, giving rise to assumptions on the formation of undetected metabolites.
    Original languageUndefined/Unknown
    Pages (from-to)121-129
    Number of pages9
    JournalToxicology Letters
    Volume189
    Issue number2
    Publication statusPublished - 2009

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