The effect of local anesthetics on arterial lipid metabolism. Inhibition of sterol esterification in vitro.
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Bell FP
The effect of local anesthetics on arterial lipid metabolism. Inhibition of sterol esterification in vitro.
Atherosclerosis. 1981 Jan-Feb;38(1-2):81-8.
- PubMed ID
- 7470208 [ View in PubMed]
- Abstract
The local anesthetics lidocaine, tetracaine, benzocaine and dibucaine were found to inhibit sterol esterification by acylCoA:cholesterol acyltransferase (ACAT, EC 2.3.1.26) in the microsomal fraction isolated from rabbit aortas. In arterial microsomes, the incorporation of [14C]oleoylCoA into [14C]steryl esters was inhibited in a dose-dependent way by the anesthetics over the concentration range 0.25-5.0 mM. The potency of inhibition was dibucaine greater than benzocaine greater than tetracaine greater than lidocaine greater than procaine with inhibition of about 85% occurring with 0.25 mM dibucaine. Sterol esterification to [14C]oleic acid was also inhibited by the anesthetics in intact aortic tissue from the rabbit, dog, and rat. A detailed study of the effects of 5 mM lidocaine on lipid biosynthesis in the rabbit aorta in vitro revealed that lidocaine not only inhibited sterol esterification to [14C]oleate but stimulated [14C]oleate incorporation into glycerides.
DrugBank Data that Cites this Article
- Drug Enzymes
Drug Enzyme Kind Organism Pharmacological Action Actions Benzocaine Liver carboxylesterase 1 Protein Humans UnknownInhibitorDetails