首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 62 毫秒
1.
The susceptibility of liver microsomes to lipid peroxidation was evaluated in seven species: rat, rabbit, trout, mouse, pig, cow, and horse. Lipid peroxidation was measured as thiobarbituric acid reactive substances formed in the presence of either FeCl3-ADP/ascorbate or FeCl2/H2O2 initiating systems. For rat, rabbit, and trout microsomes, the order of susceptibility to peroxidation was rat > rabbit >> trout. The lack of peroxidation in trout microsomes could be explained by high microsomal vitamin E levels. Membrane fatty acid levels differed between species. Docosahexaenoic acid predominated in the trout, arachidonic acid in the rat, and linoleic acid in the rabbit. The contribution of individual fatty acids to lipid peroxidation reflected the degree of unsaturation with docosahexaenoic > arachidonic >>> linoleic. For all species except trout, the predicted susceptibility to peroxidation, based on the response of individual fatty acids, agreed well with directly measured microsomal peroxidation. With the exception of the trout, vitamin E content ranged from 0.083–0.311 nmol/mg microsomal protein between species, and low levels did not influence susceptibility to peroxidation. Trout microsomes peroxidized only after vitamin E depletion by prolonged incubation. The data indicate that below a vitamin E threshold, species differences in membrane susceptibility to peroxidation can be reasonably predicted based only on content of individual peroxidizable fatty acids.  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.
Antioxidant action of Mn2+ on radical-mediated lipid peroxidation without added iron in microsomal lipid liposomes and on iron-supported lipid peroxidation in phospholipid liposomes or in microsomes was investigated. High concentrations of Mn2+ above 50 microM inhibited 2,2'-azobis (2-amidinopropane) (ABAP)-supported lipid peroxidation without added iron at the early stage, while upon prolonged incubation, malondialdehyde production was rather enhanced as compared with the control in the absence of Mn2+. However, in a lipid-soluble radical initiator, 2,2'-azobis (2,4-dimethyl-valeronitrile) (AMVN)-supported lipid peroxidation of methyl linoleate in methanol Mn2+ apparently did not scavenge lipid radicals and lipid peroxyl radicals, contrary to a previous report. At concentrations lower than 5 microM, Mn2+ competitively inhibited Fe(2+)-pyrophosphate-supported lipid peroxidation in liposomes consisting of phosphatidylcholine with arachidonic acid at the beta-position and phosphatidylserine dipalmitoyl, and reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH)-supported lipid peroxidation in the presence of iron complex in microsomes. Iron reduction responsible for lipid peroxidation in microsomes was not influenced by Mn2+.  相似文献   

4.
The peroxidation of rat liver microsomal lipids is stimulated in the presence of iron by the addition of NADPH or ascorbate and is inhibited by the addition of glutathione (GSH). The fate of GSH and the oxidative modification of proteins under these conditions have not been well studied. Rat liver microsomes were incubated at 37 degrees C under 95% O2:5% CO2 in the presence of 10 microM ferric chloride, 400 microM ADP, and either 450 microM ascorbic acid or 400 microM NADPH. Lipid peroxidation was assessed in the presence 0, 0.2, 0.5, 1, or 5 mM GSH by measuring thiobarbituric acid reactive substance (TBARS) and oxidative modification of proteins by measuring protein thiol and carbonyl groups. GSH inhibited TBARS and protein carbonyl group formation in both ascorbate and NADPH systems in a dose-dependent manner. Heat denaturing of microsomes or treatment with trypsin resulted in the loss of this protection. The formation of protein carbonyl groups could be duplicated by incubating microsomes with 4-hydroxynonenal. Ascorbate-dependent peroxidation caused a loss of protein thiol groups which was diminished by GSH only in fresh microsomes. Both boiling and trypsin treatment significantly decreased the basal protein thiol content of microsomes and enhanced ascorbate-stimulated lipid peroxidation. Protection against protein carbonyl group formation by GSH correlated with the inhibition of lipid peroxidation and appeared not to be due to the formation of the GSH conjugate of 4-hydroxynonenal as only trace amounts of this conjugate were detected. Ninety percent of the GSH lost after 60 min of peroxidation was recoverable as borohydride reducible material in the supernatant fraction. The remaining 10% could be accounted for as GSH-bound protein mixed disulfides. However, only 75% of the GSH lost during peroxidation appeared as glutathione disulfide, suggesting that some was converted to other soluble borohydride reducible forms. These data support a role for protein thiol groups in the GSH-mediated protection of microsomes against lipid peroxidation.  相似文献   

5.
The binding of products derived from the peroxidation of liver microsomal lipids to the non-lipid constituents of the microsomes was studied. To this end arachidonic acid labelled with tritium at the positions of the double bonds was given to rats and allowed to incorporate into the membrane lipids of the liver cell. When liver microsomes containing labelled arachidonic acid were incubated aerobically in the NADPH-dependent system, a marked production of malonic dialdehyde (MDA) occurred and, concomitantly, there was a consistent release of radioactivity from the microsomes into the incubation medium. The addition of EDTA to the incubation medium prevented, to a large extent, both the MDA formation and the release of radioactivity. Chromatographic studies showed that the bulk of the radioactivity released from the incubated microsomes is not MDA. In the incubated microsomes, the radioactivity decreased in total lipids, while it increased by about 15 times in the non-lipoidal residue. A similar increase in radioactivity was seen in microsomal protein, while no increase was observed in microsomal RNA (the radioactivity was negligible in both the incubated and the non-incubated samples). It seems therefore that products originating from lipoperoxidation of arachidonic acid covalently bind to the microsomal protein. In order to investigate whether alterations similar to those observed in the in vitro peroxidation of liver microsomes could be detected in the in vivo intoxication with carbon tetrachloride, rats given labelled arachidonic acid as above, were poisoned with CCl4. Sixty minutes after poisoning, the radioactivity present in the microsomal lipids was generally lower in the intoxicated rats than in the controls, while the labelling of the non-lipoidal residue and of the protein was higher in the CCl4-poisoned rats.  相似文献   

6.
The metabolism of the lipid peroxidation product 4-hydroxynonenal and of several other related aldehydes by isolated hepatocytes and rat liver subcellular fractions has been investigated. Hepatocytes rapidly metabolize 4-hydroxynonenal in an oxygen-independent process with a maximum rate (depending on cell preparation) ranging from 130 to 230 nmol/min per 10(6) cells (average 193 +/- 50). The aldehyde is also rapidly utilized by whole rat liver homogenate and the cytosolic fraction (140 000 g supernatant) supplemented with NADH, whereas purified nuclei, mitochondria and microsomes supplemented with NADH show no noteworthy consumption of the aldehyde. In cytosol, the NADH-mediated metabolism of the aldehyde exhibits a 1:1 stoichiometry, i.e. 1 mol of NADH oxidized/mol of hydroxynonenal consumed, and the apparent Km value for the aldehyde is 0.1 mM. Addition of pyrazole (10 mM) or heat inactivation of the cytosol completely abolishes aldehyde metabolism. The various findings strongly suggest that hepatocytes and rat liver cytosol respectively convert 4-hydroxynonenal enzymically is the corresponding alcohol, non-2-ene-1,4-diol, according to the equation: CH3-[CH2]4-CH(OH)-CH = CH-CHO + NADH + H+----CH3-[CH2]4-CH(OH)-CH = CH-CH2OH + NAD+. The alcohol non-2-ene-1,4-diol has not yet been isolated from incubations with hepatocytes and liver cytosolic fractions, but was isolated in pure form from an incubation mixture containing 4-hydroxynonenal, isolated liver alcohol dehydrogenase and NADH and its chemical structure was confirmed by mass spectroscopy. Compared with liver, all other tissues possess only little ability to metabolize 4-hydroxynonenal, ranging from 0% (fat pads) to a maximal 10% (kidney) of the activity present in liver. The structure of the aldehyde has a strong influence on the rate and extent of its enzymic NADH-dependent reduction to the alcohol. The saturated analogue nonanal is a poor substrate and only a small proportion of it is converted to the alcohol. Similarly, nonenal is much less readily utilized as compared with 4-hydroxynonenal. The effective conversion of the cytotoxic 4-hydroxynonenal and other reactive aldehydes to alcohols, which are probably less toxic, could play a role in the general defence system of the liver against toxic products arising from radical-induced lipid peroxidation.  相似文献   

7.
Evidence presented in this report suggests that the hydroxyl radical (OH.), which is generated from liver microsomes is an initiator of NADPH-dependent lipid peroxidation. The conclusions are based on the following observations: 1) hydroxyl radical production in liver microsomes as measured by esr spin-trapping correlates with the extent of NADPH induced microsomal lipid peroxidation as measured by malondialdehyde formation; 2) peroxidative degradation of arachidonic acid in a model OH · generating system, namely, the Fenton reaction takes place readily and is inhibited by thiourea, a potent OH · scavenger, indicating that the hydroxyl radical is capable of initiating lipid peroxidation; 3) trapping of the hydroxyl radical by the spin trap, 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-1-oxide prevents lipid peroxidation in liver microsomes during NADPH oxidation, and in the model system in the presence of linolenic acid. The possibility that cytochrome P-450 reductase is involved in NADPH-dependent lipid peroxidation is discussed. The optimal pH for the production of the hydroxyl radical in liver microsomes is 7.2. The generation of the hydroxyl radical is correlated with the amount of microsomal protein, possibly NADPH cytochrome P-450 reductase. A critical concentration of EDTA (5 × 10?5m) is required for maximal production of the hydroxyl radical in microsomal lipid peroxidation during NADPH oxidation. High concentrations of Fe2+-EDTA complex equimolar in iron and chelator do not inhibit the production of the hydroxyl radical. The production of the hydroxyl radical in liver microsomes is also promoted by high salt concentrations. Evidence is also presented that OH radical production in microsomes during induced lipid peroxidation occurs primarily via the classic Fenton reaction.  相似文献   

8.
1. Methods using t.l.c. and high-pressure liquid chromatography (h.p.l.c.) have been used to separate the complex variety of substances possessing a carbonyl function that are produced during lipid peroxidation. 2. The major type of lipid peroxidation studied was the ADP-Fe2+-stimulated peroxidation of rat liver microsomal phospholipids. Preliminary separation of the polar and non-polar products was achieved by t.l.c.: further separation and identification of individual components was performed by h.p.l.c. Estimations were performed on microsomal pellets and the supernatant mixture after incubation of microsomes for 30 min at 37 degrees C. 3. The polar fraction was larger than the non-polar fraction when expressed as nmol of carbonyl groups/g of liver. In the non-polar supernatant fraction the major contributors were n-alkanals (31% of the total), alpha-dicarbonyl compounds (22%) and 4-hydroxyalkenals (37%) with the extraction method used. 4. Major individual contributors to the non-polar fraction were found to be propanal, 4-hydroxynonenal, hexanal and oct-2-enal. Other components identified include butanal, pent-2-enal, hex-2-enal, hept-2-enal, 4-hydroxyoctenal and 4-hydroxyundecenal. The polar carbonyl fraction was less complex than the non-polar fraction, although the identities of the individual components have not yet been established. 5. Since these carbonyl compounds do not react significantly in the thiobarbituric acid reaction, which largely demonstrates the presence of malonaldehyde, it is concluded that considerable amounts of biologically reactive carbonyl derivatives are released in lipid peroxidation and yet may not be picked up by the thiobarbituric acid reaction.  相似文献   

9.
Studies were carried out to determine the effects of lung and liver cytosol on pulmonary and hepatic mierosomal lipid peroxidation, to determine the cytosolic concentrations of various substances which affect lipid peroxidation, and to determine which of these substances is responsible for the effects of the cytosol on lipid peroxidation. Lung cytosol inhibits both enzymatic (NADPH-induced) and nonenzymatic (Fe2+-induced) lung microsomal lipid peroxidation. In contrast, liver cytosol stimulates lipid peroxidation in hepatic microsomes during incubation alone, enhances Fe2+-stimulated lipid peroxidation, and has no effect on the NADPH-induced response. Substances which are known to be involved in inhibition of lipid peroxidation, including glutathione, glutathione reductase, glutathione peroxidase, and superoxide dismutase, are found in greater concentrations in liver cytosol than in lung cytosol. However, ascorbate is found in approximately equal concentrations in pulmonary and hepatic cytosol. Most of the effects of the cytosol on lipid peroxidation seem to be due to ascorbate and glutathione. For example, ascorbate, in concentrations found in lung cytosol, inhibits lung microsomal lipid peroxidation to about the same extent as the cytosol. The effects of liver cytosol on hepatic microsomal lipid peroxidation can be duplicated by concentrations of ascorbate and glutathione normally found in the cytosol; i.e., ascorbate stimulates and glutathione inhibits lipid peroxidation with the net effect being similar to that of liver cytosol. The results indicate that ascorbate has opposite effects on pulmonary and hepatic microsomal lipid peroxidation and suggest that ascorbate plays a major role in protecting pulmonary tissue against the harmful effects of lipid peroxidation.  相似文献   

10.
1. NADPH-dependent iron and drug redox cycling, as well as lipid peroxidation process were investigated in microsomes isolated from human term placenta. 2. Paraquat and menadione were found to undergo redox cycling, catalyzed by NADPH:cytochrome P-450 reductase in placental microsomes. 3. The drug redox cycling was able to initiate microsomal lipid peroxidation in the presence of micromolar concentrations of iron and ethylenediaminetetraacetate (EDTA). 4. Superoxide was essential for the microsomal lipid peroxidation in the presence of iron and EDTA. 5. Drastic peroxidative conditions involving superoxide and prolonged incubation in the presence of iron were found to destroy flavin nucleotides, inhibit NADPH:cytochrome P-450 reductase and inhibit propagation step of lipid peroxidation. 6. Reactive oxo-complex formed between iron and superoxide is proposed as an ultimate species for the initiation of lipid peroxidation in microsomes from human term placenta as well as for the destruction of flavin nucleotides and inhibition of NADPH:cytochrome P-450 reductase as well as for impairment of promotion of lipid peroxidation under drastic peroxidative conditions.  相似文献   

11.
1. Metal ion-chelating agents such as EDTA, o-phenanthroline or desferrioxamine inhibit lipid peroxide formation when rat liver microsomes prepared from homogenates made in pure sucrose are incubated with ascorbate or NADPH. 2. Microsomes treated with metal ion-chelating agents do not form peroxide on incubation unless inorganic iron (Fe(2+) or Fe(3+)) in a low concentration is added subsequently. No other metal ion can replace inorganic iron adequately. 3. Microsomes prepared from sucrose homogenates containing EDTA (1mm) do not form lipid peroxide on incubation with ascorbate or NADPH unless Fe(2+) is added. Washing the microsomes with sucrose after preparation restores most of the capacity to form lipid peroxide. 4. Lipid peroxide formation in microsomes prepared from sucrose is stimulated to a small extent by inorganic iron but to a greater extent if adenine nucleotides, containing iron compounds as a contaminant, are added. 5. The iron contained in normal microsome preparations exists in haem and in non-haem forms. One non-haem component in which the iron may be linked to phosphate is considered to be essential for both the ascorbate system and NADPH system that catalyse lipid peroxidation in microsomes.  相似文献   

12.
Preparations of rat liver sinusoidal plasma membrane have been tested for their ability to metabolize the hepatotoxin carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) to reactive free radicals in vitro and compared in this respect with standard preparations of rat liver microsomes. The sinusoidal plasma membranes were relatively free of endoplasmic reticulum-associated activities such as the enzymes of the cytochrome P450 system and glucose-6-phosphatase. CCl4 metabolism was measured as (i) covalent binding of [14C]-CCl4 to membrane protein, (ii) electron spin resonance spin-trapping of CCl3. radicals and (iii) CCl4-induced lipid peroxidation. By all of these tests, purified sinusoidal plasma membranes were found unable to metabolize CCl4. The fatty acid composition of the plasma membranes was almost identical to that of the microsomal preparation and both membrane fractions exhibited similar rates of the lipid peroxidation that was stimulated non-enzymically by gamma-radiation or incubation with ascorbate and iron. The absence of CCl4-induced lipid peroxidation in the plasma membranes seems to be due, therefore, to an absence of CCl4 activation rather than an inherent resistance to lipid peroxidation. We conclude that damage to the hepatocyte plasma membrane during CCl4 intoxication is not due to a significant local activation of CCl4 to CCl3. within that membrane.  相似文献   

13.
Seminal plasma antioxidant inhibited ascorbate/iron-induced lipid peroxidation in spermatozoa, brain and liver mitochondria. The concentration required to produce inhibition in brain and liver mitochondria was high. Denaturation of spermatozoa resulted in complete loss of antioxidant action. Maintenance of native structure was essential for action of seminal plasma antioxidant in spermatozoal lipid peroxidation. The antioxidant inhibited NADPH, Fe3+-ADP induced lipid peroxidation in microsomes and consequences of lipid peroxidation such as glucose-6-phosphatase inactivation were prevented by presence of antioxidant. It did not inhibit microsomal lipid peroxidation induced by ascorbate and iron and xanthine-xanthine oxidase.  相似文献   

14.
The cytotoxic lipid peroxidation product 4-hydroxynonenal (HNE1) is rapidly metabolized in enterocytes. The degradation of HNE and other aldehydic products of lipid peroxidation processes seems to be an antioxidative defense system. The metabolism of HNE was studied in suspensions of rat enterocytes at 37 degrees C, pH 7.4 and at initial HNE concentration of 100 microM. About 70% of the HNE were degraded within three minutes of incubation. Main products of HNE which were identified in enterocytes were the glutathione-HNE-1:1-conjugate, the hydroxynonenoic acid and the 1,4-dihydroxynonene. Furthermore, the formation of metabolites of the tricarboxylic acid cycle is suggested. The quantitative share of HNE binding to proteins was low with about 1% of total HNE consumption after three minutes of incubation.  相似文献   

15.
1. Metal ion-chelating agents such as EDTA, o-phenanthroline or desferrioxamine inhibit lipid peroxide formation when rat liver microsomes prepared from homogenates made in pure sucrose are incubated with ascorbate or NADPH. 2. Microsomes treated with metal ion-chelating agents do not form peroxide on incubation unless inorganic iron (Fe2+ or Fe3+) in a low concentration is added subsequently. No other metal ion can replace inorganic iron adequately. 3. Microsomes prepared from sucrose homogenates containing EDTA (1mm) do not form lipid peroxide on incubation with ascorbate or NADPH unless Fe2+ is added. Washing the microsomes with sucrose after preparation restores most of the capacity to form lipid peroxide. 4. Lipid peroxide formation in microsomes prepared from sucrose is stimulated to a small extent by inorganic iron but to a greater extent if adenine nucleotides, containing iron compounds as a contaminant, are added. 5. The iron contained in normal microsome preparations exists in haem and in non-haem forms. One non-haem component in which the iron may be linked to phosphate is considered to be essential for both the ascorbate system and NADPH system that catalyse lipid peroxidation in microsomes.  相似文献   

16.
During the NADPH-Fe induced peroxidation of liver microsomal lipids, products are formed which show various cytopathological effects including inhibition of microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase. The major cytotoxic substance has been isolated and identified as 4-hydroxy-2,3-trans-nonenal. The structure was ascertained by means of ultraviolet, infrared and mass spectrometry and high-pressure liquid chromatographic analysis. Moreover, 4-hydroxynonenal, prepared by chemical synthesis, was found to reproduce the biological effects brought about by the biogenic aldehyde. Preliminary investigations suggest that as compared to 4-hydroxynonenal very low amounts of other 4-hydroxyalkenals, namely 4-hydroxyoctenal, 4-hydroxydecenal and 4-hydroxyundecenal are also formed by actively peroxidizing liver microsomes. In the absence of NADPH-Fe liver microsomes produced only minute amounts of 4-hydroxyalkenals. The biochemical and biological effects of synthetic 4-hydroxyalkenals have been studied in great detail in the past. The results of these investigations together with the finding that 4-hydroxyalkenals, in particular 4-hydroxynonenal, are formed during NADPH-Fe stimulated peroxidation of liver microsomal lipids, may help to elucidate the mechanism by which lipid peroxidation causes deleterious effects on cells and cell constituents.  相似文献   

17.
A simple and rapid method for the determination of (S)-mephenytoin 4-hydroxylase activity by human liver microsomal cytochrome P-450 has been developed. [Methyl-14C] mephenytoin was synthesized by alkylation of S-nirvanol with 14CH3I and used as a substrate. After incubation of [methyl-14C]mephenytoin with human liver microsomes or a reconstituted monooxygenase system containing partially purified human liver cytochrome P-450, the 4-hydroxylated metabolite of mephenytoin was separated by thin-layer chromatography and quantified. The formation of the metabolite depended on the incubation time, substrate concentration, and cytochrome P-450 concentration and was found to be optimal at pH 7.4. The Km and Vmax rates obtained with a human liver microsomal preparation were 0.1 mM and 0.23 nmol 4-hydroxymephenytoin formed/min/nmol cytochrome P-450, respectively. The hydroxylation activity showed absolute requirements for cytochrome P-450, NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase, and NADPH in a reconstituted monooxygenase system. Activities varied from 5.6 to 156 pmol 4-hydroxymephenytoin formed/min/nmol cytochrome P-450 in 11 human liver microsomal preparations. The basic system utilized for the analysis of mephenytoin 4-hydroxylation can also be applied to the estimation of other enzyme activities in which phenol formation occurs.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of exogeneous (egg) lecithin on peroxidation of microsomal lipids was studied with the view of elucidating the role of various components of lipid substrate in the overall oxidation rate of the lipids. The following processes were studied a) NADPH-dependent microsomal lipid peroxidation in the presence of lecithin; b) ascorbate-dependent microsomal lipid peroxidation in the presence of lecithin; c) oxidation of lipid mixture, isolated from the microsomes, and that of lecithin in the presence of the Fe2+ + ascorbate system; 4) oxidation of lecithin induced by the Fe2+ + ascorbate system. It was found that in the presence of exogeneous lecithin the oxidation of microsomal lipids in inhibited, which is probably due to the peculiarities of lecithin oxidation. It was shown that the specific rate of lecithin oxidation is decreased with an increase in lecithin concentration. Possible mechanisms of lecithin effect on microsomal lipid peroxidation are discussed.  相似文献   

19.
The antioxidant ability of nitric oxide (NO) generated by a chemical donor and of commercially available antioxidant preparations was assayed. SNAP (S-Nitroso-N-acetylpenicilamine) was used as the NO donor, and Ginkgo biloba, wheat and alfalfa preparations were tested. Lipid peroxidation was assayed by EPR employing a reaction system consisting of rat liver microsomes, ADP, FeCl3, NADPH and POBN in phosphate buffer, pH=7.4. In vitro NO exposure decreased microsomal lipid peroxidation in a dose-dependent manner. The dose responsible for inhibiting the microsomal content of lipid radical adducts by 50% (LD50) for SNAP was 550 microM (NO generation rate 0.1 microM/min). The addition of 50 microM hemoglobin to the incubation media prevented NO effect on lipid peroxidation. The addition of an amount of the antioxidant preparations equivalent to the LD50 doses inhibited lipid peroxidation by 21, 15, and 33% for wheat, alfalfa, ginkgo biloba preparations respectively in the presence of 550 microM SNAP. We detected a decrease in the content of lipid radical adducts after simultaneous supplementation, although it was less than 50%, even when LD50 doses of the products were added. This suggests that NO and the natural antioxidants inhibit lipid peroxidation by a mechanism that has both common and non-shared features.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of lipid peroxidation on latent microsomal enzyme activities were examined in NADPH-reduced microsomes from phenobarbital-pretreated male rats. Lipid peroxidation, stimulated by iron or carbon tetrachloride, was assayed as malondialdehyde formation. Independent of the stimulating agent of lipid peroxidation, latency of microsomal nucleoside diphosphatase activity remained unaffected up to microsomal peroxidation equivalent to the formation of about 12 nmol malondialdehyde/mg microsomal protein. However, above this threshold a close correlation was found between lipid peroxidation and loss of latent enzyme activity. The loss of latency evoked by lipid peroxidation was comparable to the loss of latency attainable by disrupting the microsomal membrane by detergent. Loss of latent enzyme activity produced by lipid peroxidation was also observed for microsomal glucose-6-phosphatase and UDPglucuronyltransferase. In contrast to nucleoside diphosphatase, however, both enzymes were inactivated by lipid peroxidation, as indicated by pronounced decreases of their activities in detergent-treated microsomes. According to the respective optimal oxygen partial pressure (po2) for lipid peroxidation, the iron-mediated effects on enzyme activities were maximal at a po2 of 80 mmHg and the one mediated by carbon tetrachloride at a po2 of 5 mmHg. Under anaerobic conditions no alterations of enzyme activities were detected. These results demonstrate that loss of microsomal latency only occurs when peroxidation of the microsomal membrane has reached a certain extent, and that beyond this threshold lipid peroxidation leads to severe disintegration of the microsomal membrane resulting in a loss of its selective permeability, a damage which should be of pathological consequences for the liver cell. Because of its resistance against lipid peroxidation nucleoside diphosphatase is a well-suited intrinsic microsomal parameter to estimate this effect of lipid peroxidation on the microsomal membrane.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号