Protein Information

ID 259
Name protoporphyrinogen oxidase
Synonyms Mutant protoporphyrinogen oxidase; VP; PPO; PPOX; Protoporphyrinogen oxidase; V290M; Protoporphyrinogen oxidases

Compound Information

ID 935
Name acifluorfen
CAS 5-[2-chloro-4-(trifluoromethyl)phenoxy]-2-nitrobenzoic acid

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
1404247 Jacobs JM, Sinclair PR, Gorman N, Jacobs NJ, Sinclair JF, Bement WJ, Walton H: Effects of diphenyl ether herbicides on porphyrin accumulation by cultured hepatocytes. J Biochem Toxicol. 1992 Summer;7(2):87-95.
Several diphenyl ether herbicides, such as acifluorfen methyl, have been previously shown to cause large accumulations of the heme and chlorophyll precursor, protoporphyrin, in plants. Light-induced herbicidal damage is mediated by the photoactive porphyrin. Here we investigate whether diphenyl ether herbicides can affect porphyrin synthesis in rat and chick hepatocytes. In rat hepatocyte cultures, protoporphyrin, as well as coproporphyrin, accumulated after treatment with acifluorfen or acifluorfen methyl. Combination of acifluorfen methyl with an esterase inhibitor to prevent the conversion of acifluorfen methyl to acifluorfen resulted in a greater accumulation of porphyrins than caused by acifluorfen methyl or acifluorfen alone. In vitro enzyme studies of hepatic mitochondria isolated from rat and chick embryos demonstrated that protoporphyrinogen oxidase, the penultimate enzyme of heme biosynthesis, was inhibited by low concentrations of acifluorfen, nitrofen, or acifluorfen methyl with the latter being the most potent inhibitor. These findings indicate that diphenyl ether treatment can cause protoporphyrin accumulation in rat hepatocyte cultures and suggest that this accumulation was associated with the inhibition of protoporphyrinogen oxidase. In cultured chick embryo hepatocytes, treatment with acifluorfen methyl plus an esterase inhibitor caused massive accumulation of uroporphyrin rather than protoporphyrin or coproporphyrin. Specific isozymes of cytochrome P450 were also induced in chick embryo hepatocytes. These effects were not observed in the absence of an esterase inhibitor. These results suggest that diphenyl ether herbicides can cause uroporphyrin accumulation similar to that induced by other cytochrome P450-inducing chemicals such as polyhalogenated aromatic hydrocarbons in the chick hepatocyte system.
82(1,1,1,2)