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Can hepatoma cell lines be redifferentiated to be used in drug metabolism studies?
In:. North Sherwood St, Nottingham: Sage, 2004. 65-74 (ATLA-Altern. Lab. Anim. ; 32 Suppl 1A)
Knowledge of metabolism, enzymes so far involved, and potential enzyme-inhibiting or enzyme-inducing properties of new compounds is a key issue in drug development. Primary cultured hepatocytes, cytochrome P450 (CYP)-engineered cells and hepatoma cell lines are currently being used for this purpose, but only primary cultures can produce a metabolic profile of a drug similar to that found in vivo and can respond to inducers. Because of their limited accessibility, alternatives to replace human hepatocytes are currently being explored, including the immortalisation of hepatocytes by using different strategies (i.e. SV40 T-large antigen, conditionally immortalised hepatocytes, transfection with c-myc, cH-ras, N-ras oncogenes, transgenic animals over-expressing growth factors or oncogenes and cre-lox recombination/excision). However, none of the resulting cells has the desirable phenotypic characteristics to replace primary cultures in drug metabolisms studies. We investigated why these differentiated human hepatomas do not express CYP genes and found that the levels of certain key transcription factors clearly differ from those found in hepatocytes. It was then conceivable that re-expression of one (or more) of these transcription factors could lead to an efficient transcription of CYP genes. The feasibility of this hypothesis was demonstrated by genetic engineering of Hep G2 cells with liver-enriched transcription factors followed by the analysis of the expression of the most relevant human CYPs.
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Publication type
Article: Edited volume or book chapter
Language
english
Publication Year
2004
HGF-reported in Year
2004
ISSN (print) / ISBN
0261-1929
Quellenangaben
Volume: 32 Suppl 1A,
Pages: 65-74
Publisher
Sage
Publishing Place
North Sherwood St, Nottingham
Reviewing status
Peer reviewed
Institute(s)
Helmholtz Pioneer Campus (HPC)
PubMed ID
23577436
Erfassungsdatum
2019-01-17