Abstract
Background: Recombinant interferon treatment can result in several common side effects including fever and injection-site pain. Patients are often advised to use acetaminophen or other over-the-counter pain medications as needed. Little is known regarding the transcriptional changes induced by such co-administration. Methodology/Principal Findings: We tested whether the administration of acetaminophen causes a change in the response normally induced by interferon-β treatment. CD-1 mice were administered acetaminophen (APAP), interferon-β (IFN-β) or a combination of IFN-β+APAP and liver and serum samples were collected for analysis. Differential gene expression was determined using an Agilent 22 k whole mouse genome microarray. Data were analyzed by several methods including Gene Ontology term clustering and Gene Set Enrichment Analysis. We observed a significant change in the transcription profile of hepatic cells when APAP was co-administered with IFN-β. These transcriptional changes included a marked up-regulation of genes involved in signal transduction and cell differentiation and down-regulation of genes involved in cellular metabolism, trafficking and the IkBK/NF-kB cascade. Additionally, we observed a large decrease in the expression of several IFN-induced genes including Ifit-3, Isg-15, Oasl1, Zbp1 and predicted gene EG634650 at both early and late time points. Conclusions/Significance: A significant change in the transcriptional response was observed following co-administration of IFN-beta;+APAP relative to IFN-beta; treatment alone. These results suggest that administration of acetaminophen has the potential to modify the efficacy of IFN-beta; treatment. © 2010 Farnsworth et al.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Farnsworth, A., Flaman, A. S., Prasad, S. S., Gravel, C., Williams, A., Yauk, C. L., & Li, X. (2010). Acetaminophen modulates the transcriptional response to recombinant interferon-β. PLoS ONE, 5(6). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0011031
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.