Title: Toxicology 3. toxicokinetics
1Toxicology 3.toxicokinetics
- Biotransformation
- Hepatic-first pass metabolismXenobiotics
absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract - Exceptions Mouth (Nitroglycerine, weak base, to
be put under the tongue), Colon - Extrahepatic metabolism
- Epithelium of the GI tract
- Skin
- lungs
2bioavailability
- Ratio of the dose reaching the systemic
circulation (0-1) - Bioavailability depends on oral absorption and
the first pass metabolism. - Concentration of the molecule in the blood after
oral administration/ Concentration of the
molecule in the blood after intravenous
administration
3DistributionBinding to plasma proteins
- Plasma protein binding helps the distribution of
a xenobiotic and prevents its excretion - Reversible/irreversible
- affinity, Kd concentration of free xenobiotic
x concentration of free binding site/
concentration of occupied binding sites
4Species differences in binding to plasma proteins
- Thyroxine is binding to plasma proteins in
humans. 2/3 of thyroxine molecules are present in
the form of thyroglobulin, the remaining
molecules bind to albumins or prealbumins. - In rats thyroxine is dissolved in the blood
without binding to proteins. - Some xenobiotics induce metabolic enzymes and
accelerate the elimination of thyroxine. - In rats as the level of thyroxine is reduced,
the thyroid gland tries to produce more thyroxine
by cell proliferation. This can lead to tumours
in the thyroid. - In humans the same xenobiotic will not cause
thyroid tumours, because of the protein binding
of the thyroxine.
5EliminationExretion
- Biotransformation
- Ecretion via urine
- Excretion via the bile
- Excretion via the lungs
- Ecretion with mothers milk, placenta, hair,
saliva, tearsetc,
6Ultra-filtration, passive re-absorption, active
tubular secretion Table Molecular mass and the
route of some biphenyls in rats
Nefron
Route of excretion() Route of excretion()
compound Molecular mass kidney Faeces
Biphenyl 154 80 20
4-monochloro-biphenyl 188 50 50
4,4-dichloro-biphenyl 223 34 66
2,4,5,2,5-pentachloro-biphenyl 326 11 89
2,3,6,2,3,6-hexachloro-biphenyl 361 1 99
Reference H. B. Mattheus in Introduction to
Biochemical Toxicology (1960)
7Enterohepatic circulation
8Effects depend on
- Dose
- Time period of dosing
- Other molecules present (induction, inhibitionj)
- Graded response- measured on a continouos scale
- Quantal response measured by counting responders
in a group
9Receptor types
- Intracellular receptors
- Cell surface receptors
- Receptors with enzyme activity
- Receptors leading to a chain of reactions
- Receptors triggering a secondary messenger
- Ion chanels
10Intracellular receptor
11Tyrosine kinase a transmembrane receptor having
enzyme activity
12Receptor with enzyme activity triggering a chain
reaction
13G-protein coupled receptor
14Ion chanel receptor
15ToxicodynamicsEthanol
- Absorption passive diffusion from the whole
length of the GI tract Pow 0,4898 (logPow
-0,31)
16Metabolism of ethanol
- Ethanol
- Alcohol dehydrogenase (SER, MFO)
- Acetaldehyde
- Aldehyde dehydrogenase (2 isoforms, in cytosol or
mitochondria) - Acetic acid
- ACSS2 enzyme (Acetyl-coenzymeA synthetase S2,
cytosol) - Acetyl-coenzyme A
- Enzymes of the citrate cycle
- 3 H2O 2 CO2
-
Energy approximately 1300 kJ/mol
17Elimination of ethanol and its metabolites
- Ethanol urine, exhalation, sweat
- Acetic acid- urine
- Acetyl-coenzyme A- used for biosynthetic
processes, biotransformation, like acetilation or
as an energy source in the citrate cycle
18The elimination rate of ethanol
- Rate limiting step oxydation to acetaldehyde
- Reaction of 0 grade (KM 80 mg/l, but much higher
plasma concentration is frequent) - Elimination rate 10 g ethanol/hour, the
elimination of ½ l wine takes 7 hours
19Acute effects of ethanol
20For later effects (hangover, intoxication
effects) mainly the acetaldehyde is responsible
and the free radicals it generates. Free radicals
cause oxidative stress and cell death.
- Two forms of aldehyde dehydrogenase are present
in the cytosol or in mitochondria In the white
population both forms are active while in 50 of
Asiatic people the mitochondial enzyme is missing
or has a very low activity.
21Effects of chronic ethanol exposure free
radicals cell damage
- Liver is the main target organ
- Chronic hepatitis
- Fatty liver (5-50 lipid content )
- Livercirrhosis
- Liver tumours
22Further chronic effects
- Pancreas
- Pacreatitis
- Tumours
- Heart
- The performance of the heart is reduced (Chronic
cardiomyopathy) - Nervous system
- Tremors, impairment of the sight and the memory
willpower, impaired judgment, emotional lability,
outbursts of anger
23Effects on the development
- Low birth weightSmall head circumferencenervous
system disordersabnormalities of the
hippocampus learning difficultiesSmall
cerebellum motion developmental disordersSmall
corpus callosum, hyperactivity, impulsive behavior
24Some characteristics of the fetal alcohol syndrome
25Dose dependent fetal effects
- Strong drinking teratogenic effects
- Moderate drinkingneurotoxic effects
- (fetal NOAEL can not be established)
26Summary of the chronic effects of ethanol
- Toxic for several organs
- Carcinogenic (I.A.R.C. Cat1A, )
- Neurotoxic
- Teratogenic
27Causes of carcinogenesis
- Physical (ionizing radiation)Chemical (genotoxic
and non-genotoxic carcinogens)Biological
(viruses, bacteria, endoparasitic insects, etc.)
28Steps of chemical carcinogenesisStep 1 Initiation
- Highly electrophilic structures, free radicals,
organic cations bind covalently to special
nucleophilic binding sites of the DNA and form
DNA-adducts - (some critical sites Guanine C8, N2, N3, O6,
Timidine, Uracil O2, O4, N3 position).
29Step 2 Fixation
- If repair enzymes cut off the altered parts, then
DNA polymerase synthetizes the missing part on
the basis of the complementer strand ---the cell
remains normal - If the mutation takes place in an inactive part
of the DNA, this does not change the
functions-the--cell remains normal - The mutation damages seriously the functions of
the cell ---the cell dies, the organism remains
healthy - if the altered cell survives and divides-the
mutation can be fixed.
30Capacity of DNA repair in some organs
- Liver good
- Kidney intermediate
- Brain practically missing
31Step 3 Promotion selective increase of the
iniciated cells helped by a repeated effect of a
promoter within a critical period of time
- Not a genetic effect
- The result is a microscopic neoplasia
- The promoter effect is dose dependent but there
is a limit dose
32Some promoters
- Mitogens substances stimulating cell
proliferation (endogenous mitogens, like
estrogens or other hormones or exogenous
mitogens.) - Permanent presence of cytotoxic substances
- Persisting mechanical effects (irritation)
causing cytotoxicity - Blood loss in rats is promoting leukemia
33Inhibition of the carcinogenic process
- Inhibition of cell division
- Immune system (macrophags, limphokins)
- Reduced total energy intake
- Specific dietary components Vitamines A, C and E
34Step 4 Progression
- For further increase of iniciated cells often a
new mutation is needed. New initiated cell types
have to appear which produce angiogenesis factor,
helping vascularisation of the micro-tumour - Blood vessels develop in the harmless microtumour
( max.0,5 mm3) and the small tumour starts to
grow at an exponential rate. -
35Step 5 Metastases
- The tumour becomes invasive, the cancer cells
disseminate through blood and lymph vessels and
new, secunder tumours develop at different parts
of the body.
36Tumour therapy
- Surgical therapy
- Radiotherapy
- Drug therapy
- Komplex therapy
37Types of anti-cancer drugs
- Drugs inhibiting DNA duplication
- Antimetabolites (Enzyme inhibitors, nucleic acid
synthesis inhibitors methotrexate, antifolates,
pirimidin antagonists, dezoxycyitidine analogs,
purine antagonists - DNA alkylating agents cyclophosphamide (they
prevent cell proliferation, but might have
serious effects) - Topoizomerase I és II inhibitors ( they inhibit
the integration of DNA chains)
38Agents that affect the regulation of cell
proliferation
- Mitotic spindle inhibitors Vinca alkaloids,
taxanes, vinblastine, vinchristine, taxol,
taxotere (inhibiting the development of the
mitotic spindle) - Hormones and hormone-like compounds, like
progesterones, anti-estrogens, aromatase
inhibitors, anti-androgens, which inhibit the
growth of hormone dependent tumours. - Cytokins (interferons, interleukins) inhance
the immune response of the host - Tyrosine kinase inhibitors they reduce the
viability of tumour cells by inhibiting signal
transduction - Monoclonal antibodies they inactivate cell
surface receptors
393
- Drugs inhibiting vascularisation
- Avastine, thalidomide
- Anti-metastasis agents
- Bisphosphanates prevent stone metastasis
from breast and prostate tumours.
40Drugs to improve the quality of life of the
patient
- Filgrastine. Enhances the production of white
blood cells - Erithropoetine alpha helps the proliferation of
erithrocytes - Mesna, Amifostine neutralise the reactive groups
of drugs in the healthy tissues.
41Literature recommended
- Niesink et al Toxicology, Principles and
applications (1996.) CRC Press, LLC and Open
University of the NetherlandsISBN 0-8493-9232-2 - Gyires Klára, Fürst Zsuzsanna Farmakológia
(2007.) Medicina Könyvkiadó Rt., BudapestISBN
978 963 226 137 9 (I kötet)