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1.
Cultured hepatocytes pretreated with the ferric iron chelator deferoxamine were resistant to the toxicity of H2O2 generated by either glucose oxidase or by the metabolism of menadione (2-methyl-1,4-naphthoquinone). Ferric, ferrous, or cupric ions restored the sensitivity of the cells to H2O2. Deferoxamine added to hepatocytes previously treated with this chelator prevented the restoration of cell killing by only ferric iron. The free radical scavengers mannitol, thiourea, benzoate, and 4-methylmercapto-2-oxobutyrate protected either native cells exposed to H2O2 or pretreated hepatocytes exposed to H2O2 and given ferric or ferrous iron. Superoxide dismutase prevented the killing of native hepatocytes by either glucose oxidase or menadione. With deferoxamine-pretreated hepatocytes, superoxide dismutase prevented the cell killing dependent upon the addition of ferric but not ferrous iron. Catalase prevented the killing by menadione of deferoxamine-pretreated hepatocytes given either ferric or ferrous iron. Deferoxamine pretreatment did not prevent the toxicity of t-butyl hydroperoxide but did, however, prevent that of cumene hydroperoxide. It is concluded that both ferric iron and superoxide ions are required for the killing of cultured hepatocytes by H2O2. The toxicity of H2O2 is also dependent upon its reaction with ferrous iron to form hydroxyl radicals by the Fenton reaction. The ferrous iron needed for this reaction is formed by the reduction of cellular ferric iron by superoxide ions. Such a sequence corresponds to the so-called iron-catalyzed Haber-Weiss reaction, and the present report documents its participation in the killing of intact hepatocytes by H2O2. Cumene hydroperoxide but not t-butyl hydroperoxide closely models the toxicity of hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

2.
Liposome-encapsulated (LSOD) or free (FSOD), human recombinant Cu-Zn superoxide dismutase prevented the killing of cultured rat hepatocytes by tert-butyl hydroperoxide (TBHP). A dose of 32 U/ml of LSOD reduced the cell killing by 50%. By contrast, it required 288 U/ml of FSOD to similarly reduce the toxicity of TBHP by 50%. Both LSOD and FSOD increased the cell-associated superoxide dismutase activity of the cultured hepatocytes. Whereas 64 U/ml of LSOD increased cell-associated superoxide dismutase activity fourfold, it required 500 U/ml of FSOD to achieve a similar increase. Furthermore, methylamine, benzyl alcohol, cytochalasin B, oligomycin, and monensin, all inhibitors of endocytosis, prevented the increase in cell-associated superoxide dismutase produced by 500 U/ml of FSOD. These same inhibitors had no effect on the increase in cell-associated superoxide dismutase activity produced by a much lower concentration of LSOD. Thus, liposome-encapsulated superoxide dismutase prevented the cell killing by TBHP more efficiently than free superoxide dismutase because it more efficiently entered the hepatocytes by a mechanism that was independent of the endocytosis responsible for the uptake of FSOD. These data further define the conditions of the toxicity of TBHP. The target hepatocyte must contribute superoxide anions, in addition to the previously shown ferric iron. It is hypothesized that superoxide anions reduce ferric to ferrous iron; the latter then reacts with the hydroperoxide to form tert-butyl alkoxyl radicals. Such radicals are potent oxidizing agents that can initiate the peroxidation of cellular lipids previously shown to lethally injure the hepatocytes.  相似文献   

3.
Sensitivity of cultured hepatocytes to acetaminophen was induced by pretreatment of the rat with 3-methylcholanthrene. Under these conditions, 10 uM B-naphthoflavone but not SKF-525A prevented the cell killing, indicating dependence on metabolism. Inhibition of glutathione reductase by 50 uM bis-chloro-nitrosourea, shown previously to increase the sensitivity of hepatocytes to an oxidative stress, potentiated the toxicity of acetaminophen without increasing the covalent binding of acetaminophen metabolites. Pretreatment of the hepatocytes with the ferric iron chelator deferoxamine, known to reduce the sensitivity of hepatocytes to an oxidative stress, prevented the cell killing without reducing covalent binding. Addition of ferric chloride to the culture medium restored the sensitivity of the cells to acetaminophen, again without effect on the extent of covalent binding. These data demonstrate that the toxicity of acetaminophen can be dissociated from the covalent binding of its metabolites and support the conclusion that the hepatocytes were lethally injured by an oxidative stress accompanying the mixed function oxidase-dependent biotransformation of acetaminophen.  相似文献   

4.
Fe(II)- and Fe(III)-induced lipid peroxidation of rabbit small intestinal microvillus membrane vesicles was studied. Ferrous ammonium sulphate, ferrous ascorbate at a molar ratio of 10:1, and ferric citrate, at molar ratios of 1:1 and 1:20, did not stimulate lipid peroxidation. Ferrous ascorbate, 1:1, induced low stimulation, while ferrous ascorbate, 1:20 gave higher stimulation of lipid peroxidation. These results show that in our experimental system, ascorbate is a promotor rather than an inhibitor of lipid peroxidation. Ferric nitrilotriacetate (at molar ratios of 1:2 and 1:10), at an iron concentration of 200 microM, was by far the most effective in inducing lipid peroxidation. Superoxide dismutase, mannitol and glutathione had no effect, while catalase, thiourea and vitamin E markedly decreased ferrous ascorbate 1:20-induced lipid peroxidation. Ferric nitrilotriacetate-induced lipid peroxidation was slightly reduced by catalase and mannitol, significantly reduced by superoxide dismutase, and completely inhibited by thiourea. Glutathione caused a 100% increase in the ferric nitrilotriacetate-induced lipid peroxidation. These results suggest that Fe(II) in the presence of trace amounts of Fe(III), or an oxidizing agent and Fe(III) in the presence of Fe(II) or a reducing agent, are potent stimulators of lipid peroxidation of microvillus membrane vesicles. Addition of deferoxamine completely inhibited both ferrous ascorbate, 1:20 and ferric nitrilotriacetate-induced lipid peroxidation, demonstrating the requirement for iron for its stimulation. Iron-induced peroxidation of microvillus membrane may have physiological significance because it could already be demonstrated at 2 microM iron concentration.  相似文献   

5.
W J Caspary  D A Lanzo  C Niziak 《Biochemistry》1981,20(13):3868-3875
We have previously shown that the bleomycin-induced autooxidation of ferrous iron follows Michaelis--Menten kinetics which are characteristic of enzymatic reactions [Caspary, W. J., Lanzo, D. A., Niziak, C., Friedman, R., & Bachur, N. R. (1979) Mol. Pharmacol. 16, 256]. In this paper, we identify the iron complexes formed during this reaction. The first is a ferrous iron--bleomycin complex which can be considered the catalyst substrate complex. The product of this reaction is a ferric iron--bleomycin complex which is found in a low-spin and a high-spin form. The relative concentrations of these two forms are a function of pH. Glutathione, a biologically relevant reducing agent, binds to the ferric iron--bleomycin complex, reduces it, and may serve as a model for the reduction of the ferric iron--bleomycin complex to the ferrous state during the catalytic cycle. Oxygen uptake induced by bleomycin and ferrous iron is not inhibited by superoxide dismutase (SOD) or catalase. In the absence of bleomycin, catalase strongly inhibits oxygen uptake. This suggests the presence of a relatively stable intermediate in which the superoxide radical is not readily accessible to superoxide dismutase. At pH 9.3, we are able to observe a transient species by electron spin resonance (ESR). When potassium superoxide is added to the ferric iron--bleomycin complex, the same ESR spectrum is produced. We suggest that a transient species composed of a ferric iron, the superoxide ion, and bleomycin is formed. The precise nature of the binding cannot be determined from the data presented.  相似文献   

6.
It has been proposed that alterations in intracellular calcium homeostasis mediate the genesis of lethal cell injury with an acute oxidative stress. It is shown here, however, that such changes can be dissociated by two different means from the cell death occurring with the exposure of cultured hepatocytes to hydrogen peroxide generated either in the medium by glucose oxidase or intracellularly by the mechanism of menadione. The chelation of intracellular ferric iron with deferoxamine inhibits the formation of hydroxyl radicals from hydrogen peroxide and prevents cell killing. Deferoxamine did not prevent, however, an elevation of the cytosolic Ca2+ ion concentration detected as an activation of phosphorylase alpha. Sulfhydryl reagents inhibited the rise in phosphorylase alpha activity in deferoxamine-pretreated hepatocytes. Conversely, cultured hepatocytes were depleted of Ca2+ ions by treatment with EGTA in a calcium-free medium. Calcium-depleted cells were not resistant to the toxicity of hydrogen peroxide despite the virtual elimination of the activation of phosphorylase alpha. In contrast, it was possible to kill cultured hepatocytes by a mechanism dependent upon a disordered intracellular calcium homeostasis using hepatocytes pretreated in calcium-free medium with the ionophore A23187. These cells were killed in a dose-dependent manner by the addition of calcium ions to the culture medium in concentrations ranging from 0.1 to 2.0 mM. There was a similar dose-dependent activation of phosphorylase alpha, but phosphorylase alpha activities were higher than with H2O2 at comparable cell killing. Deferoxamine pretreatment and sulfhydryl reagents had no effect on the loss of viability with this calcium-dependent cell killing.  相似文献   

7.
Previously, we showed the presence in radish (Raphanus sativus L.) plasmalemma vesicles of an NAD(P)H oxidase, active at pH 4.5-5.0, which elicits the formation of anion superoxide (Vianello and Macrí (1989) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 980, 202-208). In this work, we studied the role of hydrogen peroxide and iron ions upon this oxidase activity. NADH oxidation was stimulated by ferrous ions and, to a lesser extent, by ferric ions. Salicylate and benzoate, two known hydroxyl radical scavengers, inhibited both basal and iron-stimulated NADH oxidase activity. The iron chelators EDTA (ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid) and DFA (deferoxamine melysate) at high concentrations (2 mM) inhibited the NADH oxidation, whereas they were ineffective at lower concentrations (80 microM); the subsequent addition of ferrous ions caused a rapid and limited increase of oxygen consumption which later ceased. Hydrogen peroxide was not detected during NADH oxidation but, in the presence of salicylate, its formation was found in significant amounts. NADH oxidase activity was also associated to a Fe2+ oxidation which was only partially inhibited by salicylate. Ferrous ion oxidation was partially inhibited by catalase and prevented by superoxide dismutase, while ferric ion reduction was abolished by catalase and unaffected by superoxide dismutase. These results show that during NADH oxidation iron ions undergo oxidoreduction and that hydrogen peroxide is produced and rapidly consumed. As previously suggested, this oxidation appears linked to the univalent oxidoreduction of iron ions by a reduced flavoprotein of radish plasmalemma which is then converted to a radical form. The latter, reacting with oxygen generates the superoxide anion which dismutases to H2O2. Hydrogen peroxide, through a Fenton's reaction, may react with Fe2+ to produce hydroxyl radicals, or with Fe3+ to generate the superoxide anion.  相似文献   

8.
The lysosomotropic amines methylamine (40 mM) and chloroquine (125 mM) prevented the killing of cultured hepatocytes by hydrogen peroxide generated in the medium by glucose oxidase. Maximum protection required several hours preincubation with either amine. Sensitivity of the hepatocytes to H2O2 was restored either by the addition of ferrous or ferric iron to the culture medium, or by incubating the cells for 4 hours in the absence of either amine prior to treatment with H2O2. Neither methylamine nor chloroquine had any effect on the cell killing by t-butyl hydroperoxide, a hepatotoxin that does not require iron. The protective effect of the lysosomotropic amines was distinguished from that of the ferric iron chelator deferoxamine in two ways: 1) deferoxamine protected hepatocytes from H2O2 toxicity but did not require a pretreatment period; and 2) in contrast to methylamine or chloroquine, deferoxamine had no effect on lysosomal pH as assessed by the fluorescent probe acridine orange. The data suggest that a lysosomal pool is the source of the ferric iron necessary for the killing of hepatocytes by H2O2.  相似文献   

9.
Lipid peroxidation in rat liver microsomes induced by asbestos fibres, crocidolite and chrysotile, is greatly increased in the presence of NADPH, leading to malondialdehyde levels comparable with those induced by CCl4, a very strong inducer of lipid peroxidation. This synergic effect only occurs during the first minutes and could be explained by an increase or a regeneration of the ferrous active sites of asbestos by NADPH, which in turn could rapidly be prevented by the adsorption of microsomal proteins on the surface of the fibres. It is not inhibited by superoxide dismutase, catalase and mannitol, indicating that oxygen radicals are not involved in the reaction. It is also not inhibited by desferrioxamine, indicating that it is not due to a release of free iron ions in solution from the fibres. Lipid peroxidation in NADPH-supplemented microsomes is also greatly increased upon addition of magnetite. This could be linked to the presence of ferrous ions in this solid iron oxide, since the ferric oxides haematite and goethite are completely inactive.  相似文献   

10.
Human porphyria cutanea tarda is an unusual consequence of common hepatic disorders such as alcoholic liver disease. Hepatic iron plays a key role in the expression of the metabolic lesions, i.e., defective hepatic decarboxylation of porphyrinogens, catalyzed by uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase. This prompted the present study to determine the in vitro effects of iron on the uroporphyrinogen substrate in the absence and presence of atmospheric oxygen. We observed that (i) unless oxygen is the limiting reactant, autoxidation of ferrous iron and iron-catalyzed oxidation of uroporphyrinogen occurred soon after initiating the reaction at pH 7.4 and 30 degrees C in buffers which are non- or poor chelators of iron; (ii) the rates of uroporphyrinogen oxidation were proportional to the initial concentration of ferrous ion; (iii) about 70% of the oxidations of uroporphyrinogen were accountable due to a free-radical chain reaction pathway involving superoxide radical and hence inhibitable by superoxide dismutase; (iv) uroporphyrinogen could be further oxidized to completion by the hydroxyl radical since the reaction was partially inhibited by both mannitol and catalase which prevent hydroxyl radical production; (v) the oxidizing effects of ferric ion on uroporphyrinogen were none or negligible as compared to those of ferrous ion. Ferric was reduced to ferrous ion in the presence of dithiothreitol. When the ferrous ion thus formed was reoxidized in the presence of atmospheric oxygen, minor but definite oxidations of both uroporphyrinogen and dithiothreitol were observed. The oxidations of Fe2+ and uroporphyrinogen could be blocked by 1,10-phenanthroline, a ferrous iron chelator. The data suggest that ferrous is the reactive form of iron that may contribute to pathogenic development of the disease by irreversibly oxidizing the porphyrinogen substrates to nonmetabolizable porphyrins, which accumulate in porphyric liver.  相似文献   

11.
Neopterin and 7,8-dihydroneopterin, two compounds which are secreted by activated macrophages, have been shown to interfere with radicals generated by cellular and certain chemical systems. Reduced pterins were reported to scavenge whereas aromatic pterins promoted or reduced radical mediated reactions or had no effect. However, recently it was found that high concentrations of 7, 8-dihydroneopterin enhanced luminol dependent chemiluminescence and T-cell apoptosis, suggesting an enhancement of free radical formation. In this study hydroxylation of salicylic acid was used for detection of hydroxyl radicals. It is shown that in solutions of 7,8-dihydroneopterin hydroxyl radicals were formed in the absence of any radical source. The presence of EDTA chelated iron enhanced hydroxyl radical formation. Whereas the addition of iron accelerated the hydroxylation reaction, 7,8-dihydroneopterin was responsible for the amount of hydroxylation products. In the presence of superoxide dismutase or catalase, as well as by helium purging, hydroxylation was inhibited. Our data suggest that in solutions of 7, 8-dihydroneopterin superoxide radicals are generated which are converted to hydroxyl radicals by Fenton or Haber-Weiss type reactions. While superoxide might be generated during autoxidation of ferrous iron, dihydroneopterin seems to be involved in regeneration of ferrous iron from the ferric form.  相似文献   

12.
Studies of the killing of cultured hepatocytes by acetaminophen indicate that the cells are injured by an oxidative stress that accompanies the metabolism of the toxin (J. L. Farber et al. (1988) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 267, 640-650). The present report documents that the essential features of the killing of cultured hepatocytes by acetaminophen are reproduced in the intact animal. Male rats had no evidence of liver necrosis 24 h after administration of up to 1000 mg/kg of acetaminophen. Induction of mixed function oxidase activity by 3-methylcholanthrene increased the hepatotoxicity of acetaminophen. Inhibition of glutathione reductase by 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU) potentiated the hepatotoxicity of acetaminophen in male rats induced with 3-methylcholanthrene. Whereas the pretreatment with BCNU reduced the GSH content by 40%, a comparable depletion of GSH by diethylmaleate did not potentiate the toxicity of acetaminophen. The antioxidant diphenylphenylenediamine (25 mg/kg) and the ferric iron chelator deferoxamine (1000 mg/kg) prevented the liver necrosis produced by 500 mg/kg acetaminophen in rats pretreated with BCNU. Neither protective agent prevented the fall in GSH produced by acetaminophen. It is concluded the conditions of the irreversible injury of cultured hepatocytes by acetaminophen previously reported are not necessarily different from those that obtain in the intact rat with this toxin.  相似文献   

13.
The binding of bleomycin to DNA in the presence and absence of ferric iron was measured by fluorescence spectroscopy. In millimolar concentrations of tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane, pH 7.5, approximately 80% of the bleomycin binds to DNA. Ferric iron seems to have no significant effect on the binding of DNA to bleomycin. The induction of oxygen uptake by ferrous iron and bleomycin was monitored in the presence and absence of DNA. DNA has no effect on the rate of oxygen uptake. Therefore, the iron binding site and the DNA binding site appear to be independent of each other. Under conditions where 80% of the bleomycin is bound to DNA, the ferrous iron-bleomycin-induced reduction of oxygen follows Michaelis-Menten kinetics. Ferrous iron autoxidation produces ethylene from methional. The addition of bleomycin greatly increases ethylene production. DNA, under conditions where 80% of the bleomycin is bound to DNA, inhibits ethylene production. Since ethylene is a measure of hydroxyl radical production, we conclude that DNA is able to compete with methional for the hydroxyl radical. We postulate a mechanism for DNA double-strand breaks in which the bleomycin selectively binds to DNA and recurrently produces the hydroxyl radical at that site. The localized generation of many hydroxyl radicals as provided by the proposed oxidation-reduction cycle mechanism may cause multiple strand breaks taking place on both strands of the DNA duplex leading to double-strand breaks. Since catalase, but not superoxide dismutase, is able to inhibit ferrous iron-bleomycin-induced products of the hydroxyl radical, hydrogen peroxide, but not the superoxide radical, is the immediate precursor of the hydroxyl radical.  相似文献   

14.
A complex of physiological and biochemical indices has been compared in wild and isogenic catalase-deficient strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae grown on the media with different iron ion concentrations is 2 times higher in cytosolic catalase deficient yeast. Superoxide dismutase activity grown in the medium with 500 microM of ferrous sulphate. Under such conditions, peroxisomal catalase deficient yeast had a 2-fold decreased activity of superoxide dismutase. There is a significant difference between TBA-reactive substances content of the wild and cytosolic catalase deficient strain. It has been suggested that the repletion of iron ions in the growth medium leads to the formation of lipid oxidation products. Catalase prevents TBA-reactive substances formation in the given conditions and plays a protective role.  相似文献   

15.
The copper-containing protein caeruloplasmin is an important biological extracellular protein. By catalysing the oxidation of ferrous ions to the ferric state (ferroxidase activity) it can inhibit lipid peroxidation and the Fenton reaction. This activity is readily destroyed by heat-denaturation. When a ferric-EDTA complex is added to hydrogen peroxide, OH X radicals are formed in a reaction inhibitable by superoxide dismutase (SOD). This reaction is also inhibited by caeruloplasmin both before and after heat-denaturation, suggesting a non-catalytic scavenging role for the protein. A combination of ferroxidase and radical scavenging activities in fluids containing iron complexes and hydrogen peroxide, but no SOD or catalase, would make caeruloplasmin an important extracellular antioxidant.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
We report here the relative roles of metals and selected reactive oxygen species in DNA damage by the genotoxic benzene metabolite 1,2,4-benzenetriol, and the interactions of antioxidants in affording protection. 1,2,4-Benzenetriol induces scission in supercoiled phage DNA in neutral aqueous solution with an effective dose (ED(50)) of 6.7 microM for 50% cleavage of 2.05 microg/ml supercoiled PM2 DNA. In decreasing order of effectiveness: catalase (20 U/ml), formate (25 mM), superoxide dismutase (20 U/ml), and mannitol (50 mM) protected, from 85 to 28%. Evidently, H(2)O(2) is the dominant active species, with O(2)(*)(-) and *OH playing subordinate roles. Desferrioxamine or EDTA inhibited DNA breakage by 81-85%, despite accelerating 1,2,4-benzenetriol autoxidation. Consistent with this suggestion of a crucial role for metals, addition of cupric, cuprous, ferric, or ferrous ions enhanced DNA breakage, with copper being more active than iron. Combinations of scavengers protected more effectively than any single scavenger alone, with implications for antioxidants acting in concert in living cells. Synergistic combinations were superoxide dismutase with *OH scavengers, superoxide dismutase with desferrioxamine, and catalase with desferrioxamine. Antagonistic (preemptive) combinations were catalase with superoxide dismutase, desferrioxamine with *OH scavengers, and catalase with *OH scavengers. The most striking aspect of synergism was the extent to which metal chelation (desferrioxamine) acted synergistically with either catalase or superoxide dismutase to provide virtually complete protection. Concluding, 1,2,4-benzenetriol-induced DNA damage occurs mainly by site-specific, Fenton-type mechanisms, involving synergism between several reactive intermediates. Multiple antioxidant actions are needed for effective protection.  相似文献   

18.
The killing of cultured hepatocytes by allyl alcohol depended on the metabolism of this hepatotoxin by alcohol dehydrogenase to the reactive electrophile, acrolein. An inhibitor of alcohol dehydrogenase, pyrazole, prevented both the toxicity of allyl alcohol and the rapid depletion of GSH. Treatment of the hepatocytes with a ferric iron chelator, deferoxamine, or an antioxidant, N,N'-diphenyl-p-phenylenediamine (DPPD), prevented the cell killing but not the metabolism of allyl alcohol and the resulting depletion of GSH. Inhibition of glutathione reductase by 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU) sensitized the hepatocytes to allyl alcohol, an effect that was not attributable to the reduction in GSH with BCNU. The cell killing with allyl alcohol was preceded by the peroxidation of cellular lipids as evidence by an accumulation of malondialdehyde in the cultures. Deferoxamine and DPPD prevented the lipid peroxidation in parallel with their protection from the cell killing. These data indicate that acrolein produces an abrupt depletion of GSH that is followed by lipid peroxidation and cell death. Such oxidative cell injury is suggested to result from the inability to detoxify endogenous hydrogen peroxide and the ensuing iron-dependent formation of a potent oxidizing species. Oxidative cell injury more consistently accounts for the hepatotoxicity of allyl alcohol than does the covalent binding of acrolein to cellular macromolecules.  相似文献   

19.
Cultured hepatocytes were exposed to two chemicals, dinitrofluorobenzene (DNFB) and diethyl maleate (DEM), that abruptly deplete cellular stores of glutathione. Upon the loss of GSH, lipid peroxidation was evidenced by an accumulation of malondialdehyde in the cultures followed by the death of the hepatocytes. Pretreatment of the hepatocytes with a ferric iron chelator, deferoxamine, or the addition of an antioxidant, N,N'-diphenyl-p-phenylenediamine (DPPD), to the culture medium prevented both the lipid peroxidation and the cell death produced by either DNFB or DEM. However, neither deferoxamine nor DPPD prevented the depletion of GSH caused by either agent. Inhibition of glutathione reductase by 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU) or inhibition of catalase by aminotriazole sensitized the hepatocytes to the cytotoxicity of DNFB. In a similar manner, pretreatment with BCNU potentiated the cell killing by DEM. DPPD and deferoxamine protected hepatocytes pretreated with BCNU and then exposed to DNFB or DEM. These data indicate that an abrupt depletion of GSH leads to lipid peroxidation and cell death in cultured hepatocytes. It is proposed that GSH depletion sensitizes the hepatocyte to its constitutive flux of partially reduced oxygen species. Such an oxidative stress is normally detoxified by GSH-dependent mechanisms. However, with GSH depletion these activated oxygen species are toxic as a result of the iron-dependent formation of a potent oxidizing species.  相似文献   

20.
Iron mediates paraquat toxicity in Escherichia coli   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The role of iron ions in paraquat toxicity was studied in bacterial system. We show that addition of ferrous iron led to an enhancement of the bacterial killing, whereas addition of chelating agents, such as nitrilotriacetate and desferrioxamine, markedly reduced, up to a total abolishment, the toxic effects. The calculated rates of bacterial killing are proportional to both paraquat and iron concentrations, and conform to the rate equation: dN/dt = -k[paraquat] [Fe2+]. The killing constant for iron, k, is 24-fold smaller than the corresponding value for copper. Mannitol, an OH. scavenger, has a partial protective effect: 15-35% at concentrations range of 1-50 mM, respectively. Histidine, on the other hand, provided a more efficient protection that may be due to a combination of various effects. Induction of endogenous superoxide dismutase and catalase provided partial protection (about 25%). These findings, together with an earlier study on the role of copper in paraquat toxicity (Kohen, R., and Chevion, M. (1985) Free Rad. Res. Commun. 1, 79-88) indicate that transition metals play a central catalytic role in the production of the deleterious effects of paraquat, probably by redox cycling and producing OH. via the site-specific Fenton reaction.  相似文献   

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