Toxicological evaluation of Z24, a novel indolin-2-ketone compound, in cultured human liver cells using toxicogenomic techniques

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Abstract

The current study was designed to investigate the toxicity of 3Z-3-[( 1H-pyrrol-2-yl)-methylidene]-1-(1-piperidinylmethyl)-1, 3-2H-indol-2-one (Z24), a novel synthetic indolin-2-ketone small molecule compound, using toxicogenomic techniques (complementary DNA [cDNA] microarray). Bioinformatic analysis suggested that the main functions of genes with altered expression were consistent with liver cell regeneration, apoptosis, metabolism of energy and fat, and the death receptor (DR)-mediated apoptosis-signaling pathway. Death receptor 4, Bcl-2, Bcl-xl, caspase 3, and cytochrome C, which are involved in the DR-mediated apoptosis-signaling pathway, were altered after Z24 treatment as determined by Western blotting analysis. When hepatocarcinoma cell line (HepG2 cells) treated with Z24 at 0.248 mmol/L for 24 hours, DNA fragmentation reached a maximum, and examination of cell morphology showed typical signs of apoptosis. These results indicate that Z24 can initiate apoptosis in hepatocytes, which in turn causes hepatotoxicity. A possible toxicological mechanism is that apoptosis was induced in hepatocytes by initiating the DR-mediated signal transduction pathway. Apoptosis of hepatocytes might lead to impairment of energy and lipid metabolism and provoke hepatocyte necrosis or inflammation, resulting in hepatotoxicity. © The Author(s) 2010.

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Wang, Q., Zhao, J., Yang, B., Jiang, Y., Wu, C., Zheng, Z., … Liao, M. (2010). Toxicological evaluation of Z24, a novel indolin-2-ketone compound, in cultured human liver cells using toxicogenomic techniques. International Journal of Toxicology, 29(4), 380–390. https://doi.org/10.1177/1091581810370373

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