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. 1987 Oct 1;247(1):207-14.
doi: 10.1042/bj2470207.

Stimulation of uric acid release from the perfused rat liver by platelet activating factor or potassium

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Stimulation of uric acid release from the perfused rat liver by platelet activating factor or potassium

C E Hill et al. Biochem J. .

Abstract

The stimulation of hepatic glycogenolysis by platelet activating factor (AGEPC) or increased perfusate potassium concentration ([K+]o), but not phenylephrine, causes a transient increase in uric acid release into the effluent perfusate of perfused rat livers. Uric acid was identified in chromatograms of perfusate samples using reversed-phase h.p.l.c., which show a peak which co-elutes with authentic uric acid, and by the fact that the A293 of perfusate samples decreases in the presence of uricase. Uric acid release is dose-dependent with respect to both AGEPC and [K+]o, and is blocked completely by prior exposure of the perfused liver to 5 mM-allopurinol, a specific inhibitor of xanthine oxidase (XOD). Allopurinol inhibits the increase in portal vein pressure induced by AGEPC, increased [K+]o or phenylephrine; the inhibitory effect increases with increasing concentrations of the agents. Also, allopurinol inhibits the second phase of O2 uptake and glucose release characteristic of concentrations of AGEPC or increased [K+]o equal to or greater than their reported half-maximal concentration for glucose release. The ratio of xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) to XOD activity in extracts of freeze-clamped perfused livers is not affected by treatment of the livers with AGEPC or increased [K+]o. The results suggest that uric acid production may be an indicator of ischaemia within localized hepatic sinusoids, and that allopurinol partially protects the hepatocyte from the effects of AGEPC or increased [K+]o by inhibiting XOD-dependent superoxide production. We propose that the second phase of the glycogenolytic response to these agents results from ischaemia and subsequent reperfusion. Activation of XOD in vivo and hence O2-derived free radical production may be involved in the response of the liver to vasoactive agonists under a variety of pathophysiological conditions.

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