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1.
We studied the synergistic effect of visible light and ferritin on the lipid peroxidation on a fraction of porcine photoreceptor outer segment (POS). Reaction mixtures containing the POS fraction and horse spleen ferritin were irradiated under white fluorescent light mainly at 17,000 lx or incubated under dark conditions at 37°C. The lipid peroxidation was evaluated by both the thiobarbituric acid method and the ferrous oxidation/xylenol orange method. The irradiation-induced lipid peroxidation was affected by some experimental factors such as the irradiation dose and acidity of the material. When the irradiation was stopped, the lipid peroxidation was also stopped; thereafter, the re-irradiation induced lipid peroxidation. Moreover, this lipid peroxidation was inhibited by desferrioxamine, an iron chelator, or by dimethylthiourea, a hydroxyl radical scavenger, suggesting that the lipid peroxidation involves hydroxyl radicals generated via the Fenton reaction by iron ion released from ferritin. The lipid peroxidation did not take place under dark conditions or in the absence of ferritin. This study suggested the possibility that the visible light-induced lipid peroxidation of the POS fraction in the presence of ferritin may participate in the etiology of human retinal degenerative diseases as the human retina is exposed to light for life.  相似文献   

2.
We investigated the iron release from ferritin by irradiation from a white fluorescent light in the absence or presence of ADP. Irradiation of a ferritin solution at 17,000 lx in the absence of ADP slightly induces iron release from ferritin but only at acidic pH conditions (pH 5.0 or pH 6.0). Irradiation in the presence of ADP markedly enhances iron release from ferritin under the same conditions. In the absence of irradiation, the iron release from ferritin was low even in the presence of ADP. The induction of the iron release by irradiation in the presence of ADP was also affected by various factors such as irradiation dose and acidity, but not temperature (4-47°C), oxygen concentration, or free radical generations during the irradiation. The iron release during the irradiation ceased to increase by turning off the light and was found to increase again after additional irradiation. These results suggest that visible light directly induces iron release from ferritin via the photoreduction of iron stored inside ferritin.  相似文献   

3.
《Free radical research》2013,47(1):153-159
Ceruloplasmin (CP) effectively inhibited superoxide and ferritin-dependent peroxidation of phospholipid liposomes, using xanthine oxidase or gamma irradiation of water as sources of superoxide. In addition, CP inhibited superoxide-dependent mobilization of iron from ferritin. suggesting that CP inhibited lipid peroxidation by decreasing the availability of iron from ferritin. CP also exhibited some superoxide scavenging activity as evidenced by its inhibition of superoxide-dependent cytochrome c reduction. However, superoxide scavenging by CP did not quantitatively account for its inhibitory effects on iron release. The effects of CP on iron-catalyzed lipid peroxidation in systems containing exogenously added ferrous iron was also investigated. CP exhibited prooxidant and antioxidant effects; CP stimulated at lower concentrations, reached a maximum. and inhibited at higher concentrations. However. the addition of apoferritin inhibited CP and Fe(II)-catalyzed lipid peroxidation at all concentrations of CP. In addition, CP catalyzed the incorporation of Fe(II) into apoferritin. Collectively these data suggest that CP inhibits superoxide and ferritin-dependent lipid peroxidation via its ability to incorporate reductively-mobilized iron into ferritin.  相似文献   

4.
Ferritin and superoxide-dependent lipid peroxidation   总被引:23,自引:0,他引:23  
Ferritin was found to promote the peroxidation of phospholipid liposomes, as evidenced by malondialdehyde formation, when incubated with xanthine oxidase, xanthine, and ADP. Activity was inhibited by superoxide dismutase but markedly stimulated by the addition of catalase. Xanthine oxidase-dependent iron release from ferritin, measured spectrophotometrically using the ferrous iron chelator 2,2'-dipyridyl, was also inhibited by superoxide dismutase, suggesting that superoxide can mediate the reductive release of iron from ferritin. Potassium superoxide in crown ether also promoted superoxide dismutase-inhibitable release of iron from ferritin. Catalase had little effect on the rate of iron release from ferritin; thus hydrogen peroxide appears to inhibit lipid peroxidation by preventing the formation of an initiating species rather than by inhibiting iron release from ferritin. EPR spin trapping with 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide was used to observe free radical production in this system. Addition of ferritin to the xanthine oxidase system resulted in loss of the superoxide spin trap adduct suggesting an interaction between superoxide and ferritin. The resultant spectrum was that of a hydroxyl radical spin trap adduct which was abolished by the addition of catalase. These data suggest that ferritin may function in vivo as a source of iron for promotion of superoxide-dependent lipid peroxidation. Stimulation of lipid peroxidation but inhibition of hydroxyl radical formation by catalase suggests that, in this system, initiation is not via an iron-catalyzed Haber-Weiss reaction.  相似文献   

5.
A number of xenobiotics are toxic because they rcdox cycle and generate free radicals. Interaction with iron, either to produce reactive species such as the hydroxyl radical, or to promote lipid peroxidation, is an important factor in this toxicity. A potential biological source of iron is ferritin. The cytotoxic pyrimidines, dialuric acid, divicine and isouramil, readily release iron from ferritin and promote ferritin-dependent lipid peroxidation. Superoxide dismutase and GSH, which maintain the pyrimidines in their reduced form, enhance both iron release and lipid peroxidation. Microsomes plus NADPH can reduce a number of iron complexes, although not ferritin. Reduction of Adriamycin. paraquat or various quinones to their radicals by the microsomes enhances reduction of the iron complexes, and in some cases, enables iron release from ferritin. Adriamycin stimulates iron-dependent lipid peroxidation of the microsomes. Ferritin can provide the iron, and peroxidation is most pronounced at low PO2. Compiexing agents that supress intraccllular iron reduction and lipid peroxidation may protect against the toxicity of Adriamycin.  相似文献   

6.
Iron overload aggravates tissue damage caused by ischemia and ethanol intoxication. The underlying mechanisms of this phenomenon are not yet clear. To clarify these mechanisms we followed free iron (“loosely” bound redox-active iron) concentration in livers from rats subjected to experimental iron overload, acute ethanol intoxication, and ex vivo warm ischemia. The levels of free iron in non-homogenized liver tissues, liver homogenates, and hepatocyte cultures were analyzed by means of EPR spectroscopy. Ischemia gradually increased the levels of endogenous free iron in liver tissues and in liver homogenates. The increase was accompanied by the accumulation of lipid peroxidation products. Iron overload alone, known to increase significantly the total tissue iron, did not affect either free iron levels or lipid peroxidation. Homogenization of iron-loaded livers, however, resulted in the release of a significant portion of free iron from endogenous depositories. Acute ethanol intoxication increased free iron levels in liver tissue and diminished the portion of free iron releasing during homogenization. Similarly to liver tissue, the primary hepatocyte culture loaded with iron in vitro released significantly more free iron during homogenization compared to non iron-loaded hepatocyte culture. Analyzing three possible sources of free iron release under these experimental conditions in liver cells, namely ferritin, intracellular transferrin-receptor complex and heme oxygenase, we suggest that redox active free iron is released from ferritin under ischemic conditions whereas ethanol and homogenization facilitate the release of iron from endosomes containing transferrin-receptor complexes.  相似文献   

7.
The interaction of microsomes with iron and NADPH to generate active oxygen radicals was determined by assaying for low level chemiluminescence. The ability of several ferric complexes to catalyze light emission was compared to their effect on microsomal lipid peroxidation or hydroxyl radical generation. In the absence of added iron, microsomal light emission was very low; chemiluminescence could be enhanced by several cycles of freeze-thawing of the microsomes. The addition of ferric ammonium sulfate, ferric-citrate, or ferric-ADP produced an increase in chemiluminescence, whereas ferric-EDTA or -diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (detapac) were inhibitory. The same response to these ferric complexes was found when assaying for malondialdehyde as an index of microsomal lipid peroxidation. In contrast, hydroxyl radical generation, assessed as oxidation of chemical scavengers, was significantly enhanced in the presence of ferric-EDTA and -detapac and only weakly elevated by the other ferric complexes. Ferric-desferrioxamine was essentially inert in catalyzing any of these reactions. Chemiluminescence and lipid peroxidation were not affected by superoxide dismutase, catalase, or competitive hydroxyl radical scavengers whereas hydroxyl radical production was decreased by the latter two but not by superoxide dismutase. Chemiluminescence was decreased by the antioxidants propylgallate or glutathione and by inhibiting NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase with copper, but was not inhibited by metyrapone or carbon monoxide. The similar pattern exhibited by ferric complexes on microsomal light emission and lipid peroxidation, and the same response of both processes to radical scavenging agents, suggests a close association between chemiluminescence and lipid peroxidation, whereas both processes can be readily dissociated from free hydroxyl radical generation by microsomes.  相似文献   

8.
Iron storage proteins, ferritin and haemosiderin, release iron to a range of chelators and reducing agents, including citrate, acetate and ascorbate. Released iron promotes both hydroxyl radical formation in the presence of hydrogen peroxide and lipid peroxidation in liposomes. Ferritin protein is modified in such reactions, both by free radical cleavage and addition reactions with aldehyde products of lipid peroxidation.  相似文献   

9.
Treatment of bovine pulmonary artery smooth muscle microsomes with the superoxide radical generating system hypoxanthine plus xanthine oxidase stimulated iron release, hydroxyl radical production and lipid peroxidation. Pretreatment of the microsomes with deferoxamine or dime thy lthiourea markedly inhibited lipid peroxidation, and prevented hydroxyl radical production without appreciably altering iron release. The superoxide radical generating system did not alter the ambient superoxide dismutase activity. However,addition of exogenous superoxide dismutase prevented superoxide radical induced iron release,hydroxyl radical production and lipid peroxidation. Simultaneous treatment of the microsomes with deferoxamine, dimethylthiourea or superoxide dismutase prevented hydroxyl radical production and liqid peroxidation. While deferoxamine or dimethylthiourea did not appreciably alter iron release, superoxide dismutase prevented iron release. However, addition of deferoxamine, dimethylthiourea or superoxide dismutase even 2 min after treatment did not significantly inhibit lipid peroxidation, hydroxyl radical production and iron release. Pretreatment of microsomes with the anion channel blocker 4,4’- dithiocyano 2,′- disulphonic acid stilbine did not cause any discernible change in chemiluminiscence induced by the superoxide radical generating system but markedly inhibited lipid peroxidation without appreciably altering iron release and hydroxial radical production.  相似文献   

10.
In the past, antioxidant and chelator studies have implicated a role for iron-dependent oxidative damage in tissues subjected to ischaemia followed by reperfusion. As ferritin is a major source of iron in non-muscular organs and therefore a potential source of the iron required for oxygen radical chemistry, we have determined conditions under which ferritin iron reduction leads to the formation of a pool of iron which is capable of catalysing lipid peroxidation. Under anaerobic conditions and in the presence of rat liver microsomes, flavin mononucleotide (FMN) catalysed the reduction of ferritin iron as shown by both continuous spectrophotometric measurements of tris ferrozine-Fe(II) complex formation and post-reaction Fe(II) determination. The presence of either ferrozine or citrate was not found to alter the time course or extent of ferritin reduction. In contrast, the addition of air to the reactants after a 20 min period of anaerobic reduction resulted in peroxidation of the microsome suspension (as determined with the 2-thiobarbituric acid test) only in the presence of a chelator such as citrate, ADP or nitrilotriacetic acid. These results support the concept that reduced ferritin iron can mediate oxidative damage during reperfusion of previously ischaemic tissues, provided that chelating agents such as citrate or ADP are present.  相似文献   

11.
《Free radical research》2013,47(1):125-129
The iron storage protein, ferritin, represents a possible source of iron for oxidative reactions in biological systems. It has been shown that superoxide and several xenobiotic free radicals can release iron from ferritin by a reductive mechanism. Tetravalent vanadium (vanadyl) reacts with oxygen to generate superoxide and pentavalent vanadium (vanadate). This led to the hypothesis that vanadyl causes the release of iron from ferritin. Therefore, the ability of vanadyl and vanadate to release iron from ferritin was investigated. Iron release was measured by monitoring the generation of the Fe2+-fcrrozine complex. It was found that vanadyl but not vanadate was able to mobilize ferritin iron in a concentration dependent fashion. Initial rates. and iron release over 30 minutes. were unaffected by the addition of superoxide dismutase. Glutathione or vanadate added in relative excess to the concentration of vanadyl, inhibited iron release up to 45%. Addition of ferritin at the concentration used for measuring iron release prevented vanddyl-induced NADH oxidation. Vanadyl promoted lipid peroxidation in phospholipid liposomes. Addition of ferritin to the system stimulated lipid peroxidation up to 50% above that with vanadyl alone. Fcrritin alone did not promote significant levels of lipid peroxidation.  相似文献   

12.
The diabetogenic action of alloxan is believed to involve oxygen free radicals and iron. Incubation of glutathione (GSH) and alloxan with rat liver ferritin resulted in release of ferrous iron as assayed by spectrophotometric detection of ferrous-bathophenanthroline complex formation. Neither GSH nor alloxan alone mediated iron release from ferritin. Superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase did not affect initial rates of iron release whereas ceruloplasmin was an effective inhibitor of iron release. The reaction of GSH with alloxan resulted in the formation of the alloxan radical which was detected by ESR spectroscopy and by following the increase in absorbance at 310nm. In both instances, the addition of ferritin resulted in diminished alloxan radical detection. Incubation of GSH, alloxan, and ferritin with phospholipid liposomes also resulted in lipid peroxidation. Lipid peroxidation did not occur in the absence of ferritin. The rates of lipid peroxidation were not affected by the addition of SOD or catalase, but were inhibited by ceruloplasmin. These results suggest that the alloxan radical releases iron from ferritin and indicates that ferritin iron may be involved in alloxan-promoted lipid peroxidation.  相似文献   

13.
A model lipid peroxidation system dependent upon the hydroxyl radical, generated by Fenton's reagent, was compared to another model system dependent upon the enzymatic generation of superoxide by xanthine oxidase. Peroxidation was studied in detergent-dispersed linoleic acid and in phospholipid liposomes. Hydroxyl radical generation by Fenton's reagent (FeCl2 + H2O2) in the presence of phospholipid liposomes resulted in lipid peroxidation as evidenced by malondialdehyde and lipid hydroperoxide formation. Catalase, mannitol, and Tris-Cl were capable of inhibiting activity. The addition of EDTA resulted in complete inhibition of activity when the concentration of EDTA exceeded the concentration of Fe2+. The addition of ADP resulted in slight inhibition of activity, however, the activity was less sensitive to inhibition by mannitol. At an ADP to Fe2+ molar ratio of 10 to 1, 10 mm mannitol caused 25% inhibition of activity. Lipid peroxidation dependent on the enzymatic generation of superoxide by xanthine oxidase was studied in liposomes and in detergent-dispersed linoleate. No activity was observed in the absence of added iron. Activity and the apparent mechanism of initiation was dependent upon iron chelation. The addition of EDTA-chelated iron to the detergent-dispersed linoleate system resulted in lipid peroxidation as evidenced by diene conjugation. This activity was inhibited by catalase and hydroxyl radical trapping agents. In contrast, no activity was observed with phospholipid liposomes when iron was chelated with EDTA. The peroxidation of liposomes required ADP-chelated iron and activity was stimulated upon the addition of EDTA-chelated iron. The peroxidation of detergent-dispersed linoleate was also enhanced by ADP-chelated iron. Again, this peroxidation in the presence of ADP-chelated iron was not sensitive to catalase or hydroxyl radical trapping agents. It is proposed that initiation of superoxide-dependent lipid peroxidation in the presence of EDTA-chelated iron occurs via the hydroxyl radical. However, in the presence of ADP-chelated iron, the participation of the free hydroxyl radical is minimal.  相似文献   

14.
The role of iron in allyl alcohol-induced lipid peroxidation and hepatic necrosis was investigated in male NMRI mice in vivo. Ferrous sulfate (0.36 mmol/kg) or a low dose of ally alcohol (0.6 mmol/kg) itself caused only minor lipid peroxidation and injury to the liver within 1 h. When FeSO4 was administered before allyl alcohol, lipid peroxidation and liver injury were potentiated 50-100-fold. Pretreatment with DL-tocopherol acetate 5 h before allyl alcohol protected dose-dependently against allyl alcohol-induced lipid peroxidation and liver injury in vivo. Products of allyl alcohol metabolism, i.e. NADH and acrolein, both mobilized trace amounts of iron from ferritin in vitro. Catalytic concentrations of FMN greatly facilitated the NADH-induced reductive release of ferritin-bound iron. NADH effectively reduced ferric iron in solution. Consequently, a mixture of NADH and Fe3+ or NADH and ferritin induced lipid peroxidation in mouse liver microsomes in vitro. Our results suggest that the reductive stress (excessive NADH formation) during allyl alcohol metabolism can release ferrous iron from ferritin and can reduce chelated ferric iron. These findings provide a rationale for the strict iron-dependency of allyl alcohol-induced lipid peroxidation and hepatotoxicity in mice in vivo and document iron mobilization and reduction as one of several essential steps in the pathogenesis.  相似文献   

15.
Changes in hydrolytic enzyme activities were investigated during spore germination ofAdiantum capillus-veneris L. The spores were incubated for 3 days in the dark at 25 C for imbibition, and then germination of the spores was induced by continuous irradiation with red light. At day 2 after onset of the red light irradiation, rhizoids appeared out of spore coats and protonemal cells became visible on the following day. Lipase occurred in dry spores and its activity decreased during 3 days of dark incubation. The activity started to increase when the spore germination was induced by red light irradiation. On the other hand, amylolytic and aminopeptidase activities which were also detected in dry spores decreased continuously during the dark incubation and following the germination process. RNase activity also decreased during 3 days of dark incubation but the activity was retained thereafter at a constant level with or without red light irradiation. Developmental patterns of these hydrolytic enzymes were classified into two groups: One decreased during imbibition and dark incubation but increased after red light irradiation and the other continuously decreased during dark incubation and germination. These results are discussed in relation to compositional changes of cell constitutions such as lipid, sugars, proteins and amino acids during spore germination.  相似文献   

16.
The role of iron in the peroxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids is reviewed, especially with respect to the involvement of oxygen radicals. The hydroxyl radical can be generated by a superoxide-driven Haber-Weiss reaction or by Fenton's reaction; and the hydroxyl radical can initiate lipid peroxidation. However, lipid peroxidation is frequently insensitive to hydroxyl radical scavengers or superoxide dismutase. We propose that the hydroxyl radical may not be involved in the peroxidation of membrane lipids, but instead lipid peroxidation requires both Fe2+ and Fe3+. The inability of superoxide dismutase to affect lipid peroxidation can be explained by the fact that the direct reduction of iron can occur, exemplified by rat liver microsomal NADPH-dependent lipid peroxidation. Catalase can be stimulatory, inhibitory or without affect because H2O2 may oxidize some Fe2+ to form the required Fe3+, or, alternatively, excess H2O2 may inhibit by excessive oxidation of the Fe2+. In an analogous manner reductants can form the initiating complex by reduction of Fe3+, but complete reduction would inhibit lipid peroxidation. All of these redox reactions would be influenced by iron chelation.  相似文献   

17.
The iron storage protein, ferritin, represents a possible source of iron for oxidative reactions in biological systems. It has been shown that superoxide and several xenobiotic free radicals can release iron from ferritin by a reductive mechanism. Tetravalent vanadium (vanadyl) reacts with oxygen to generate superoxide and pentavalent vanadium (vanadate). This led to the hypothesis that vanadyl causes the release of iron from ferritin. Therefore, the ability of vanadyl and vanadate to release iron from ferritin was investigated. Iron release was measured by monitoring the generation of the Fe2+-fcrrozine complex. It was found that vanadyl but not vanadate was able to mobilize ferritin iron in a concentration dependent fashion. Initial rates. and iron release over 30 minutes. were unaffected by the addition of superoxide dismutase. Glutathione or vanadate added in relative excess to the concentration of vanadyl, inhibited iron release up to 45%. Addition of ferritin at the concentration used for measuring iron release prevented vanddyl-induced NADH oxidation. Vanadyl promoted lipid peroxidation in phospholipid liposomes. Addition of ferritin to the system stimulated lipid peroxidation up to 50% above that with vanadyl alone. Fcrritin alone did not promote significant levels of lipid peroxidation.  相似文献   

18.
Food irradiation is a form of food processing to extend the shelf life and reduce spoilage of food. We examined the effects of γ radiation on the fatty acid composition, lipid peroxidation level, and antioxidative activity of soybean and soybean oil which both contain a large amount of unsaturated fatty acids. Irradiation at 10 to 80 kGy under aerobic conditions did not markedly change the fatty acid composition of soybean. While 10-kGy irradiation did not markedly affect the fatty acid composition of soybean oil under either aerobic or anaerobic conditions, 40-kGy irradiation considerably altered the fatty acid composition of soybean oil under aerobic conditions, but not under anaerobic conditions. Moreover, 40-kGy irradiation produced a significant amount of trans fatty acids under aerobic conditions, but not under anaerobic conditions. Irradiating soybean oil induced lipid peroxidation and reduced the radical scavenging activity under aerobic conditions, but had no effect under anaerobic conditions. These results indicate that the fatty acid composition of soybean was not markedly affected by radiation at 10 kGy, and that anaerobic conditions reduced the degradation of soybean oil that occurred with high doses of γ radiation.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Pirfenidone (Pf), a new broad-spectrum anti-fibrotic agent, is known to offer protection against lung fibrosis in vivo in laboratory animals, and against mitogenesis and collagen formation by human lung fibroblasts in vitro. Because reactive oxygen species are thought to be involved in these events, we investigated the mechanism(s) by which Pf ameliorates oxidative stress and its effects on NADPH-dependent lipid peroxidation. Pf has been shown to cause inhibit NADPH-dependent lipid peroxidation in sheep liver microsomes in a dose-dependent manner. The concentration of Pf required to cause 50% inhibition of lipid peroxidation was ~ 6 mM. Pf was found to be ineffective as a superoxide radical scavenger. Pf was also ineffective in decomposing H2O2 and chelating iron. In deoxyribose degradation assays, Pf was a potent scavenger of hydroxyl radicals with a rate constant of 5.4 × 109 M-1 sec-1. EPR spectroscopy in combination with spin trapping techniques, using a Fenton type reaction and DMPO as a spin-trapping agent, Pf scavenged hydroxyl radicals in a dose-dependent manner. The concentration of Pf required to inhibit 50% signal height was ~ 2.5 mM. Because iron was used in the Fenton reaction, the ability of Pf in chelating iron was verified in a fluorescent competitive assay using calcein as the fluorescent probe. Pf up to 10 mM concentration was ineffective in chelating either Fe2+ or Fe3+ in this system. We propose that Pf exerts its beneficial effects, at least in part, through its ability to scavenge toxic hydroxyl radicals.  相似文献   

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