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. 1989 Jul 21;992(1):49-58.
doi: 10.1016/0304-4165(89)90049-4.

Heme catabolism in cultured hepatocytes: evidence that heme oxygenase is the predominant pathway and that a proportion of synthesized heme is converted rapidly to biliverdin

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Heme catabolism in cultured hepatocytes: evidence that heme oxygenase is the predominant pathway and that a proportion of synthesized heme is converted rapidly to biliverdin

B C Lincoln et al. Biochim Biophys Acta. .

Abstract

Heme oxygenase has been considered to be involved in the predominant pathway of heme degradation in vivo. However, alternative pathways involving cytochrome P-450 reductase, and lipid peroxidation, have previously been demonstrated in vitro, and studies with cultured rat hepatocytes were interpreted to show a majority of endogenous hepatic heme breakdown by non-heme oxygenase pathways. To clarify the pathway of heme breakdown in hepatocytes and the role of heme oxygenase in this process, cultured hepatocytes were pre-labelled with 5-[5-14C]aminolevulinate [( 14C]ALA). Radioactivity in heme, carbon monoxide, and bile pigments was measured for 8-24 h after the removal of [14C]ALA. In cultured chick embryo hepatocytes, which lack biliverdin reductase, the rate of production of biliverdin IXa was closely similar to the rate of catabolism of exogenous heme and radioactivity in carbon monoxide and biliverdin IXa was similar to the loss of radioactivity from endogenous heme. These results support the conclusion that heme breakdown occurred predominantly, if not solely, by heme oxygenase. Also, no evidence of non-heme oxygenase pathways was found in the presence of tin protoporphyrin, an inhibitor of heme oxygenase or mephenytoin, an inducer of both cytochrome P-450 and heme oxygenase. Similarly, in untreated cultured rat hepatocytes, radioactivity in carbon monoxide corresponded with loss of radioactivity in endogenous heme. In other experiments with chick hepatocyte cultures, rates of heme synthesis and breakdown were measured, and data were fitted to various models of hepatic heme metabolism. The results observed were consistent only with models in which an appreciable fraction (control cells, 17%, mephenytoin treated cells, 41%) of the newly synthesized heme was degraded rapidly to biliverdin.

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