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Association of chlorphentermine with phospholipids in rat alveolar lavage materials, alveolar macrophages and type II cells
Authors:J Y Ma  J K Ma  K C Weber  L Bowman  M J Reasor  P R Miles
Institution:Appalachian Laboratory for Occupational Safety and Health, Biochemistry Section, Morgantown, WV 26505.
Abstract:Administration of chlorphentermine to rats leads to an increase in the phospholipid content of pulmonary surfactant materials and alveolar macrophages. It is known that this drug binds to pure phospholipids and prevents their degradation by phospholipases. Therefore, experiments were carried out to determine if chlorphentermine binds to surfactant phospholipids in vitro and to measure the in vivo association of drug with phospholipids in alveolar lavage materials from rats injected with 14C]chlorphentermine. The presence of chlorphentermine in alveolar macrophages, type II cells and other small pneumocytes (a population of lung cells which does not include alveolar macrophages or type II cells) from treated animals was also assessed. Binding of the drug to surfactant phospholipids, as measured with the fluorescent probe, 1-anilino-8-naphthalene sulfonate, occurs in vitro and does not differ in various subfractions of alveolar lavage materials isolated by differential centrifugation. Following daily administration of chlorphentermine to rats for 3 days, the drug appears to be associated with surfactant phospholipids such that the molar ratio is 1:100 (chlorphentermine/phospholipid). Chlorphentermine is also associated with alveolar macrophages (molar ratio, 1:18) and type II cells (molar ratio, 1:33). Not much drug is associated with the population of other lung cells (molar ratio, 1:333). In alveolar macrophages, approx. 70% of the drug seems to be bound to phospholipid and/or sequestered in subcellular organelles. However, only 20% of the chlorphentermine is bound and/or sequestered in type II cells. The results of these experiments suggest that following chlorphentermine administration, the drug is associated with phospholipids in acellular pulmonary lavage materials, alveolar macrophages and type II cells. This drug-phospholipid interaction may impair phospholipid degradation and lead to a phospholipidosis in surfactant materials and alveolar macrophages.
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