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JBC, Vol. 251, Issue 17, 5366-5374, Sep, 1976
A. I. Cederbaum, F. F. Becker and E. Rubin
1. Ethanol metabolism in slices or homogenates of transplantable
hepatocellular carcinoma HC-252 (HC-252) was 50 to 60% of the rate found in
host liver slices or homogenates when they were expressed per gram of
tissue wet weight and 70 to 80% of the liver when the rates were expressed
per milligram of tissue protein. At 10 mM ethanol, the activities of
alcohol dehydrogenase in tumor and liver supernatants were comparable. 2.
Tumor microsomes did not oxidize ethanol in the presence of a
NADPH-generating system, indicating the absence of the microsomal
ethanol-oxidizing system and catalase-mediated peroxidation of ethanol. The
HC-252 microsomes were contaminated with catalase, and acetaldehyde
production occurred in the presence of a H2O2-generating system (xanthine
oxidase). The virtual absence of ethanol oxidation and drug metabolism
(aminopyrine demethylase and aniline hydroxylase) in HC-252 microsomes may
be due to the low activities of NADPH-cytochrome c reductase, NADPH
oxidase, and NADPH-dependent oxygen uptake. 3. Microsomal oxidation of
ethanol was present in Morris hepatoma 5123C, a well-differentiated tumor
of intermediate growth rate, while activity was negligible in microsomes
from Morris hepatoma 7288CTC, a less differentiated tumor. Microsomal NADPH
oxidase was present in the well differentiated tumor 5123C but was lacking
in the less differentiated tumor 7288CTC. Several microsomal,
mitochondrial, and cytosolic properties of HC-252 are similar to those of
Morris hepatoma 7288CTC but differ from those of the more differentiated
5123C tumor and normal liver. 4. The content of mitochondrial protein in
HC-252 was only 25% that of liver, and oxygen consumption per gram of tumor
was only 28% that of the liver. When corrected for the mitochondrial
protein content, oxygen uptake in tumor HC-252 and liver homogenates was
comparable. Isolated tumor and liver mitochondria displayed comparable
State 4 and 3 rates of oxygen consumption with succinate and glutamate as
substrates. The activities of the reconstituted malate-aspartate and
alpha-glycerophosphate shuttles were only slightly lower in isolated HC-252
mitochondria compared to liver mitochondria, when shuttles were
reconstituted with purified enzymes. 5. Antimycin inhibited alcohol
metabolism,and pyruvate stimulated alcohol metabolism, much less in tumor
slices than in liver slices, suggesting the presence of an augmented
mitochondria-independent, cytosolic mechanism for oxidizing reducing
equivalents in the tumor. These factors suggest that oxidation of NADH is
the limiting factor in ethanol metabolism. Whereas, in the liver
mitochondrial reoxidation is predominant, in HC-252, cytosolic reoxidation
of NADH also plays a major role.
Ethanol metabolism by a transplantable hepatocellular carcinoma. Role of microsomes and mitochondria
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