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A study of hepatic mitochondrial respiration and microsomal cytochrome P450 content in mice infected with the liver fluke Fasciola hepatica
Authors:AC Somerville  FL Bygrave  CA Behm
Affiliation:Division of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, School of Life Sciences, Australian National University, Canberra.
Abstract:
Previous studies of the effects of infection of Wistar rats with the common liver fluke, Fasciola hepatica, on liver bioenergetic and drug metabolism have demonstrated a loss of respiratory control in isolated mitochondria and reduced microsomal cytochrome P450 content, respectively, from 2 weeks post-infection throughout the acute phase of the infection. In the present study male Balb/c mice infected with F. hepatica showed a loss of respiratory control in isolated liver mitochondria only at 4 weeks post-infection. A similar time course was demonstrated for a reduction in hepatic microsomal cytochrome P450 content. Preparations from infected CBA mice showed similar changes to Balb/c mice but mitochondrial respiration in preparations from infected Swiss outbred mice was normal. A host difference between strains of mice and between mice and rats is therefore evident in the timing and extent of liver mitochondrial dysfunction and in the timing of the decrease in the cytochrome P450 content of hepatic microsomes. This difference between hosts may be related to the reported differences in cellular inflammatory responses to the migrating juvenile flukes in the livers of rats and mice.
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