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1.
Rat liver microsomal glutathione transferase displays glutathione peroxidase activity with linoleic acid hydroperoxide, linoleic acid ethyl ester hydroperoxide, and dilinoleoyl phosphatidylcholine hydroperoxide, with rates of 0.2, 0.3, and 0.3 mumol/min/mg, respectively. The activities are increased between three- and fourfold when the enzyme is activated with N-ethylmaleimide. Microsomal glutathione transferase can also conjugate 4-hydroxynon-2-enal with a specific activity of 0.5 mumol/min/mg. These findings show that the enzyme can remove harmful products of lipid peroxidation and thereby possibly protect intracellular membranes against oxidative stress. A set of glutathione transferase inhibitors (rose bengal, tributyltin acetate, S-hexylglutathione, indomethacin, cibacron blue, and bromosulfophtalein) which abolish the glutathione-dependent protection against lipid peroxidation in liver microsomes have been characterized. These inhibitors were found to be effective in the micromolar range and could prove valuable in studying the factor responsible for glutathione-dependent protection against lipid peroxidation.  相似文献   

2.
Simultaneous addition of ascorbic acid and organic hydroperoxides to rat liver microsomes resulted in enhanced lipid peroxidation (approximately threefold) relative to incubation of organic hydroperoxides with microsomes alone. No lipid peroxidation was evident in incubations of ascorbate alone with microsomes. The stimulatory effect of ascorbate on linoleic acid hydroperoxide (LAHP)-dependent peroxidation was evident at all times whereas stimulation of cumene hydroperoxide (CHP)-dependent peroxidation occurred after a lag phase of up to 20 min. EDTA did not inhibit CHP-dependent lipid peroxidation but completely abolished ascorbate enhancement of lipid peroxidation. Likewise, EDTA did not significantly inhibit peroxidation by LAHP but dramatically reduced ascorbate enhancement of lipid peroxidation. The results reveal a synergistic prooxidant effect of ascorbic acid on hydroperoxide-dependent lipid peroxidation. The inhibitory effect of EDTA on enhanced peroxidation suggests a possible role for endogenous metals mobilized by hydroperoxide-dependent oxidations of microsomal components.  相似文献   

3.
The addition of limiting amounts of cumene hydroperoxide to rat liver microsomes prepared from phenobarbital-treated rats resulted in the rapid uptake of molecular oxygen, the formation of thiobarbituric acid reactive products, and the loss of hydroperoxide over a similar time course. Maximal activity was observed at pH 7-8. The addition of cumene hydroperoxide to boiled microsomes did not initiate oxygen uptake or produce thiobarbituric acid reactive products. Oxygen uptake was required for the formation of thiobarbituric acid reactive products, but not for the loss of hydroperoxide. The extent of oxygen uptake and thiobarbituric acid reactive product formation was linearly dependent on the concentration of cumene hydroperoxide and independent of the amount of microsomes. For each nanomole of cumene hydroperoxide utilized, 1.5 nmol of oxygen was consumed and 0.11 nmol of thiobarbituric acid reactive products was formed. In addition, a saturable reaction having a high affinity for cumene hydroperoxide was observed that was associated with little or no oxygen uptake and thiobarbituric acid reactive product formation. Butylated hydroxytoluene at substoichiometric concentrations inhibited the extents and initial rates of oxygen uptake and thiobarbituric acid reactive product formation, indicating that cumene hydroperoxide-dependent lipid peroxidation may be an autocatalytic free radical process.  相似文献   

4.
Glutathione peroxidase activities from rat liver   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
There are two enzymes in rat liver with glutathione peroxidase activity when cumene hydroperoxide is used as substrate. One is the selenium-requiring glutathione peroxidase (glutathione:hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.9) and the other appears to be independent of dietary selenium. Activities of the two enzymes vary greatly among tissues and among animals. The molecular weight of the enzyme with selenium-independent glutathione peroxidase activity was estimated by gel filtration to be 35 000, and the subunit molecular weight was estimated by dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to be 17 000. Double reciprocal plots of enzyme activity as a function of substrate concentration produced intersecting lines which are suggestive of a sequential reaction mechanism. The Km for glutathione was 0.20 mM and the Km for cumene hydroperoxide was 0.57 mM. The enzyme was inhibited by N-ethylmaleimide, but not by iodoacetic acid. Inhibition by cyanide was competitive with respect to glutathione and the Ki for cyanide was 0.95 mM. This selenium-independent glutathione peroxidase also catalyzes the conjugation of glutathione to 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene. Along with other similarities to glutathione S-transferase, this suggests that the selenium-independent glutathione peroxidase and glutathione S-transferase activities in rat liver are of the same enzyme.  相似文献   

5.
A glutathione peroxidase (GPX) protein was purified approximately 1000-fold from Southern bluefin tuna (Thunnus maccoyii) liver to a final specific activity of 256 micromol NADPH oxidised min(-1) mg(-1) protein. Gel filtration chromatography and denaturing protein gel electrophoresis of the purified preparation indicated that the protein has a native molecular mass of 85 kDa and is most likely a homotetramer with subunits of approximately 24 kDa. The Km values of the purified enzyme for hydrogen peroxide, cumene hydroperoxide, t-butyl hydroperoxide and glutathione were 12, 90, 90 and 5900 microM, respectively. The Km values for cumene hydroperoxide and t-butyl hydroperoxide were approximately 8-fold greater than the Km value for hydrogen peroxide. Thus, the SBT liver GPX has a considerably greater affinity for hydrogen peroxide than for the other two substrates. The pH optimum of the purified enzyme was pH 8.0. Immunoblotting experiments with polyclonal antibodies, raised against a recombinant human GPX, provided further evidence that the purified SBT enzyme is a genuine GPX.  相似文献   

6.
Hamster liver glutathione peroxidase was purified to homogeneity in three chromatographic steps and with 30% yield. The purified enzyme had a specific activity of approximately 500 μmol cumene hydroperoxide reduced/min/mg of protein at 37 °C, pH 7.6, and 0.25 mm GSH. The enzyme was shown to be a tetramer of indistinguishable subunits, the molecular weight of which was approximately 23,000 as estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. A single isoelectric point of 5.0 was attributed to the active enzyme. Amino acid analysis determined that selenocysteine, identified as its carboxymethyl derivative, was the only form of selenium. One residue of cysteine was found to be present in each glutathione peroxidase subunit. The presence of tryptophan was colorimetrically determined. Pseudo-first-order kinetics of inactivation of the enzyme by iodoacetate was observed at neutral pH with GSH as the only reducing agent. An optimal pH of 8.0 at 37 °C and an activation energy of 3 kcal/mol at pH 7.6 were found. A ter-uni-ping-pong mechanism was shown by the use of an integrated-rate equation. At pH 7.6, the apparent second-order rate constants for reaction of glutathione peroxidase with hydroperoxides were as follows: k1 (t-butyl hydroperoxide), 7.06 × 105 mm min?1; k1 (cumene hydroperoxide), 1.04 × 106 mm?1 min?1; k1 (p-menthane hydroperoxide), 1.2 × 106 mm?1 min?1; k1 (diisopropylbenzene hydroperoxide), 1.7 × 106 mm?1 min?1; k1 (linoleic acid hydroperoxide), 2.36 × 106 mm?1 min?1; k1 (ethyl hydroperoxide), 2.5 × 106 mm?1 min?1; and k1 (hydrogen peroxide), 2.98 × 106 mm?1 min?1. It is concluded that for bulky hydroperoxides, the more hydrophobic the substrate, the faster its reduction by glutathione peroxidase.  相似文献   

7.
A novel glutathione peroxidase, which is active toward hydroperoxides of phospholipid in the presence of a detergent, has been purified to homogeneity from a rat liver postmicrosomal supernatant fraction by ammonium sulfate fractionation and three different column chromatographies. From a DE52 column, glutathione peroxidase active toward phosphatidylcholine dilinoleoyl hydroperoxides was eluted in one major and two minor peaks. The enzyme in the major peak was found to be separated from the "classic" glutathione peroxidase and glutathione S-transferases and further purified by Sephacryl S-200 and Mono Q column chromatographies. The purified enzyme was found to be homogeneous on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under nondenaturing conditions as well as that in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate. The molecular weight of the enzyme as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis was 22,000, and that by gel filtration was comparable, indicating that the enzyme protein is a single polypeptide. The purified enzyme was found to catalyze the reduction of phosphatidylcholine dilinoleoyl hydroperoxides to the corresponding hydroxy derivatives. The isoelectric point of the enzyme was found at pH 6.2, and the optimum pH for the enzyme activity was 8.0. The enzyme was active toward cumene hydroperoxide, H2O2, and 1-monolinolein hydroperoxides in the absence of a detergent. The enzyme activity toward phospholipid hydroperoxides was minute in the absence of a detergent but was remarkably enhanced by the addition of a detergent. From these results, the presently purified enzyme is obviously different from the classic glutathione peroxidase and also from phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase purified from pig heart (Ursini, F., Maiorino, M., and Gregolin, C. (1985) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 839, 62-70), though considerably similar to the latter.  相似文献   

8.
Phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase (PHGPx), as a ubiquitous antioxidant enzyme in the glutathione peroxidases (GPx) family, plays multiple roles in organisms. However, there is very little information on PHGPx in goats (Capra hircus). In this study, a full-length cDNA was cloned and characterized from Taihang black goat testes. The 844 bp cDNA contains an open reading frame (ORF) of 597 bp. The goat PHGPx nucleotide sequence contains a selenocysteine (sec) codon TGA244-246, two potential start codons ATG20-22 and ATG108-110, a polyadenylation signal AATAAA813-818 and selenocysteine insertion sequence (SECIS) motif AUGA688-691, UGA729-731 and AAA703-705. As a selenoprotein, the active-site motifs and GPx family signature motifs LAFPCNQF101-108 and WNFEK165-170 were also found. The order of PHGPx mRNA expression levels was: testes >> heart > brain > epididymis > kidney > liver > lung > spleen > muscle. Real-time PCR and immunohistochemistry results revealed similar expression differences in different age testes, with high expression levels during adolescence. Immunofluorescence results suggested that PHGPx mainly expressed in Leydig cells and spermatids in mature goat testes.  相似文献   

9.
The liver microsomal enzyme system that catalyzes the oxidation of NADPH by organic hydroperoxides has been solubilized and resolved by the use of detergents into fractions containing NADPH-cytochrome c reductase, cytochrome P-450 (or P-448), and microsomal lipid. Partially purified cytochromes P-450 and P-448, free of the reductase and of cytochrome b5, were prepared from liver microsomes of rats pretreated with phenobarbital (PB) and 3-methylcholanthrene (3-MC), respectively, and reconstituted separately with the reductase and lipid fractions prepared from PB-treated animals to yield enzymically active preparations functional in cumene hydroperoxide-dependent NADPH oxidation. The reductase, cytochrome P-450 (or P-448), and lipid fractions were all required for maximal catalytic activity. Detergent-purified cytochrome b5 when added to the complete system did not enhance the reaction rate. However, the partially purified cytochrome P-450 (or P-448) preparation was by itself capable of supporting the NADPH-peroxidase reaction but at a lower rate (25% of the maximal velocity) than the complete system. Other heme compounds such as hematin, methemoglobin, metmyoglobin, and ferricytochrome c could also act as comparable catalysts for the peroxidation of NADPH by cumene hydroperoxide and in these reactions, NADH was able to substitute for NADPH. The microsomal NADH-dependent peroxidase activity was also reconstituted from solubilized components of liver microsomes and was found to require NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase, cytochrome P-450 (or P-448), lipid, and cytochrome b5 for maximal catalytic activity. These results lend support to our earlier hypothesis that two distinct electron transport pathways operate in NADPH- and NADH-dependent hydroperoxide decomposition in liver microsomes.  相似文献   

10.
In the Trypanosomatidae, trypanothione has subsumed many of the roles of glutathione in defense against chemical and oxidant stress. Crithidia fasciculata lacks glutathione S-transferase, but contains an unusual trypanothione S-transferase activity that is associated with eukaryotic translation elongation factor 1B (eEF1B). Here we describe the cloning, expression, and reconstitution of the purified alpha, beta, and gamma subunits of eEF1B from Leishmania major. Individual subunits lacked trypanothione S-transferase activity. Only eEF1B, formed by reconstitution or co-expression of the three subunits, was able to conjugate a variety of electrophilic substrates to trypanothione or glutathionylspermidine, but not glutathione. In contrast to the C. fasciculata eEF1B, the L. major enzyme also displayed peroxidase activity against a variety of organic hydroperoxides. The enzyme showed no activity with hydrogen peroxide and greatest activity with linoleic acid hydroperoxide (1 unit mg(-1)). Kinetic studies suggest a ternary complex mechanism, with Km values of 140 mum for trypanothione and 7.4 mm for cumene hydroperoxide and kcat=25 s(-1). Immunofluorescence studies indicate that the enzyme may be localized to the surface of the endoplasmic reticulum. These results suggest that, in addition to its role in protein synthesis, the Leishmania eEF1B may help protect the parasite from lipid peroxidation.  相似文献   

11.
1. Metabolism of added hydroperoxides was studied in hemoglobin-free perfused rat liver and in isolated rat hepatocytes as well as microsomal and mitochondrial fractions. 2. Perfused liver is capable of removing organic hydroperoxides [cumene and tert-butyl hydroperoxide] at rates up to 3--4 mumol X min-1 X gram liver-1. Concomitantly, there is a release of glutathione disulfide (GSSG) into the extracellular space in a relationship approx. linear with hydroperoxide infusion rates. About 30 nmol GSSG are released per mumol hydroperoxide added per min per gram liver. GSSG release is interpreted to indicate GSH peroxidase activity. 3. GSSG release is observed also with added H2O2. At rates of H2O2 infusion of about 1.5 mumol X min-1 X gram liver-1 a maximum of GSSG release is attained which, however, can be increased by inhibition of catalase with 3-amino-1,2,4-aminotriazole. 4. A contribution of the endoplasmic reticulum in addition to glutathione peroxidase in organic hydroperoxide removal is demonstrated (a) by comparison of perfused livers from untreated and phenobarbital-pretreated rats and (b) in isolated microsomal fractions, and a possible involvement of reactive iron species (e.g. cytochrome P-450-linked peroxidase activity) is discussed. 5. Hydroperoxide addition to microsomes leads to rapid and substantial lipid peroxidation as evidenced by formation of thiobarbituric-acid-reactive material (presumably malondialdehyde) and by O2 uptake. Like in other types of induction of lipid peroxidation, malondialdehyde/O2 ratios of 1/20 are observed. Cumene hydroperoxide (0.6 mM) gives rise to 4-fold higher rates of malondialdehyde formation than tert-butyl hydroperoxide (1 mM). Ethylenediamine tetraacetate does not inhibit this type of lipid peroxidation. 6. Lipid peroxidation in isolated hepatocytes upon hydroperoxide addition is much lower than in isolated microsomes or mitochondria, consistent with the presence of effective hydroperoxide-reducing systems. However, when NADPH is oxidized to the maximal extent as evidenced by dual-wavelength spectrophotometry, lipid peroxidation occurs at large amounts. 7. A dependence of hydroperoxide removal rates upon flux through the pentose phosphate pathway is suggested by a stimulatory effect of glucose in hepatocytes from fasted rats and by an increased rate of 14CO2 release from [1-14C]glucose during hydroperoxide metabolism in perfused liver.  相似文献   

12.
A 25.5kDa class alpha glutathione S-transferase (GST) designated as microsomal Ya-GST or M-GSTA has been purified to electrophoretic homogeneity from human liver microsomes. Limited proteolysis, gel filtration chromatography followed by EDTA, and alkaline Na(2)CO(3) treatments of microsomes indicate that the M-GSTA is intrinsic to the microsomes. Western immunoblot analysis revealed that human liver M-GSTA and the previously reported 17-kDa microsomal GST (FEBS Lett. 315 (1993) 77) did not have immunological cross reactivity. The enzyme showed conjugation activity towards substrates like 1-chloro-2,4-nitrobenzene (CDNB) and 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole, and 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (4-HNE), a genotoxic alpha,beta-unsaturated aldehyde product of lipid peroxidation. In addition, the M-GSTA exhibited significant glutathione peroxidase activity towards physiologically relevant fatty acid hydroperoxides as well as phosphatidylcholine hydroperoxide, but not with H(2)O(2). C-terminal amino acid sequence analysis revealed a high homology with the human liver cytosolic GST-A1 and A3 isozymes. Western immunoblot analyses of the microsomes prepared from human hepatoblastoma (HepG2) showed that the expression of this M-GSTA was induced upon treatment with such prooxidants as H(2)O(2), suggesting that it may play an important role in the protection of cellular membranes from peroxidative damage.  相似文献   

13.
The addition of limiting amounts of cumene hydroperoxide to rat liver microsomes resulted in the rapid uptake of molecular oxygen, the formation of thiobarbituric acid reactive products, and the loss of hydroperoxide. The stoichiometry of lipid peroxidation and the yields of 2-phenyl-2-propanol (a major product of the reaction) and acetophenone (a minor product) observed with liver microsomes prepared from untreated rats is greater than that seen with liver microsomes from ciprofibrate-treated rats which, in turn, is greater than that observed with liver microsomes from phenobarbital-treated rats. The Km's and Vmax's of oxygen uptake varied with the type of rat liver microsomes used. Cytochrome P-450 substrates and inhibitors decreased the extents and initial rates of oxygen uptake and thiobarbituric acid reactive product formation. A mechanism is proposed involving the cytochrome P-450-catalyzed homolytic cleavage of the cumene hydroperoxide O-O bond to give the cumyloxyl radical. It is proposed that this oxygen-centered radical abstracts a hydrogen atom from an unsaturated fatty acid associated with a lipid (initiating lipid peroxidation) to give 2-phenyl-2-propanol or that the radical undergoes beta-scission to produce acetophenone and a methyl radical.  相似文献   

14.
The concentration of lipoperoxides (estimated as thiobarbituric acid-reactive material) and some components of the antioxidant defence system have been compared in various tissues of lean and congenitally obese mice. NADPH-stimulated lipoperoxide generation in vitro was significantly higher in microsomes (microsomal fractions) prepared from obese hepatic tissue than lean. Plasma, liver and brain lipoperoxide concentration was significantly higher in obese mice. In blood derived from obese mice the concentration of non-enzymic antioxidants including caeruloplasmin and vitamin A was higher, but hepatic retinol concentration was lower in these animals. In all the tissues assayed the glutathione peroxidase activity against H2O2 was less than its activity against cumene hydroperoxide. Assayed with either substrate, glutathione peroxidase activity was significantly higher in the brain and blood of obese mice than their lean counterparts. Conversely, liver glutathione peroxidase was decreased in obese animals, representing 43% of the activity of the lean-mouse liver enzyme against H2O2 and 81% of the cumene hydroperoxide-reducing activity. The liver of obese mice had significantly less, and the kidneys more, oxidized glutathione than the corresponding tissues of lean mice. Further investigations on hepatic tissue indicated that glutathione reductase activity was lower in the obese animals, but there was no significant difference between glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity in obese and lean mice.  相似文献   

15.
In order to elucidate the protective role of glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) against oxidative stress, we have investigated the kinetic properties of the human alpha-class GSTs, hGSTA1-1 and hGSTA2-2, toward physiologically relevant hydroperoxides and have studied the role of these enzymes in glutathione (GSH)-dependent reduction of these hydroperoxides in human liver. We have cloned hGSTA1-1 and hGSTA2-2 from a human lung cDNA library and expressed both in Escherichia coli. Both isozymes had remarkably high peroxidase activity toward fatty acid hydroperoxides, phospholipid hydroperoxides, and cumene hydroperoxide. In general, the activity of hGSTA2-2 was higher than that of hGSTA1-1 toward these substrates. For example, the catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) of hGSTA1-1 for phosphatidylcholine (PC) hydroperoxide and phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) hydroperoxide was found to be 181.3 and 199.6 s-1 mM-1, respectively, while the catalytic efficiency of hGSTA2-2 for PC-hydroperoxide and PE-hydroperoxide was 317.5 and 353 s-1 mM-1, respectively. Immunotitration studies with human liver extracts showed that the antibodies against human alpha-class GSTs immunoprecipitated about 55 and 75% of glutathione peroxidase (GPx) activity of human liver toward PC-hydroperoxide and cumene hydroperoxide, respectively. GPx activity was not immunoprecipitated by the same antibodies from human erythrocyte hemolysates. These results show that the alpha-class GSTs contribute a major portion of GPx activity toward lipid hydroperoxides in human liver. Our results also suggest that GSTs may be involved in the reduction of 5-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid, an important intermediate in the 5-lipoxygenase pathway.  相似文献   

16.
An electron transport system that catalyzes the oxidation of NADPH by organic, hydroperoxides has been discovered in microsomal fractions. A tissue distribution study revealed that the microsomal fraction of rat liver was particularly effective in catalyzing the NADPH-peroxidase reaction whereas microsomes from adrenal cortex, lung, kidney, and testis were weakly active. The properties of the hepatic microsomal NADPH-peroxidase enzyme system were next examined in detail.The rate of NADPH oxidation by hydroperoxides was first-order with respect to microsomal protein concentration and a Km value for NADPH of less than 3 μm was obtained. Examination of the hydroperoxide specificity revealed that cumene hydroperoxide and various steroid hydroperoxides were effective substrates for the enzyme system. Using cumene hydroperoxide as substrate, the reaction rate showed saturation kinetics with increasing concentrations of hydroperoxide and an apparent Km of about 0.4 mm was obtained. The NADPH-peroxidase reaction was inhibited by potassium cyanide, half-maximal inhibition occurring at a cyanide concentration of 2.2 mm. NADH was able to support the NADPH-dependent peroxidase activity synergistically.Evidence compiled for the involvement of NADPH-cytochrome c reductase (NADPH-cytochrome c oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.2.3) in the NADPH-peroxidase reaction included: (1) an identical pH optimum for both activities; (2) stimulation of NADPH-peroxidase activity by increasing ionic strength; (3) inhibition by 0.05 mm, p-hydroxymercuribenzoate with partial protection by NADPH; (4) inhibition by NADP+; and (5) inactivation by antiserum to NADPH-cytochrome c reductase. In contrast, antibody to cytochrome b5 did not inhibit the NADPH-peroxidase activity. Evidence for the participation of cytochrome P-450 in the NADPH-peroxidase reaction included inhibition by compounds forming type I, type II, and modified type II difference spectra with cytochrome P-450; inhibition by reagents converting cytochrome P-450 to cytochrome P-420; and marked stimulation by in vivo phenobarbital administration. The NADPH-reduced form of cytochrome P-450 was oxidized very rapidly by cumene hydroperoxide under a CO atmosphere.It was concluded that the NADPH-peroxidase enzyme system of liver microsomes is composed of the same electron transport components which function in substrate hydroxylation reactions.  相似文献   

17.
The reactivity of rat liver glutathione (GSH) peroxidase with two hydroperoxides was determined using integrated rate equations. The bimolecular rate constant for the reaction of GSH peroxidase with linoleic acid hydroperoxide is approximately four times the rate constant with cumene hydroperoxide. The reactivity toward reduced glutathione is not altered by different hydroperoxides. The t12 for lipid hydroperoxide in rat liver is approximated at 9.5 × 10?5 min.  相似文献   

18.
Gel filtration chromatography demonstrated the presence of two peaks of glutathione peroxidase activity assayed with cumene hydroperoxide in the soluble fraction of rat liver, brain, kidney, and testis. The peak with an approximate molecular weight of 45,000 (GSH-Px II) was purified from rat liver labeled in vivo with Na275SeO3. Chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, Sephadex G-150, DEAE-cellulose, and CM-cellulose resulted in the co-purification of glutathione-S-transferase activity measured with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene and glutathione peroxidase activity assayed with cumene hydroperoxide, and in the removal of all detectable 75Se. Studies on GSH-Px II indicated that the apparent Km for both cumene and t-butyl hydroperoxides was considerably higher than that for purified seleno-glutathione peroxidase. The Vmax estimated with cumene hydroperoxide was only 1300 of that determined for the selenoenzyme at pH 7.5 and with 1 mM GSH.  相似文献   

19.
The antioxidative effect of selenium cannot be exclusively due to the functioning of the selenium-dependent glutathione peroxidase mechanism of utilization of various hydroperoxides. This hypothesis is based on the following experimental evidence. Selenium ions are readily incorporated into animal organs and tissues immediately after injection (2 hours) as well as into cell organelles and cytosol where they inhibit lipid peroxidation. The activity of glutathione peroxidase (EC 1.1.1.19) in rat liver and guinea pig cytosol is thereby unchanged but increases drastically after 12 hours reaching a maximum an the 3rd-4th day. The effectiveness of lipid peroxidation inhibition does not increase under these conditions. Although the glutathione peroxidase activity is absent in the nuclei and microsomes, exogenous selenium inhibits lipid peroxidation in these organelles. The activity of the rat liver cytosolic enzyme markedly exceeds that of its guinea pig counterpart. However, lipid peroxidation in guinea pig liver occurs less intensively than that in rat liver cytosol.  相似文献   

20.
In vitro exposure of hepatocytes or liver microsomes to t-butyl hydroperoxide resulted in a marked decrease of liver microsomal calcium pump activity. Decreased calcium pump activity was dependent upon both concentration and time. Liver microsomes could be protected from this effect by glutathione or dithiothreitol. In addition to decreased calcium pump activity, exposure of liver microsomes to t-butyl hydroperoxide produced a concentration-dependent aggregation of microsomal membrane protein as determined by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Inhibition of microsomal calcium pump activity was observed when intact hepatocytes were incubated, in vitro, with t-butyl hydroperoxide. However, aggregation of microsomal membrane protein was not observed when hepatocytes were incubated with t-butyl hydroperoxide. The effects produced by exposure of liver microsomes to this compound do not appear to be a complete model of actions of the compound on intact cells.  相似文献   

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