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1.
Hepatocytes freshly isolated from diethylmaleate-treated rats exhibited a markedly decreased concentration of reduced glutathione (GSH) which increased to the level present in hepatocytes from nontreated rats upon incubation in a complete medium. When bromobenzene was present in the medium, however, this increase in GSH concentration upon incubation was reversed and a further decrease occurred that resulted in GSH depletion and cell death. This was prevented by metyrapone, an inhibitor of the cytochrome P-450-linked metabolism of bromobenzene. Bromobenzene metabolism in hepatocytes was accompanied by a fraction of metabolites covalently binding to cellular proteins. The size of this fraction, relative to the amount of total metabolites, was increased in hepatocytes isolated from diethylmaleate-treated rats and in hepatocytes from phenobarbital-treated rats incubated with bromobenzene in the presence of 1,2-epoxy-3,3,3-trichloropropane, an inhibitor of microsomal epoxide hydrase which, however, also acted as a GSH-depleting agent. In addition, the metabolism of bromobenzene by hepatocytes was associated with a marked decrease in various coenzyme levels, including coenzyme A, NAD(H), and NADP(H). Cysteine and cysteamine inhibited the formation of protein-bound metabolites of bromobenzene in microsomes, but did not prevent bromobenzene toxicity in hepatocytes when added at higher concentrations to the incubation medium (containing 0.4 mm cysteine). Methionine, on the other hand, did not cause a significant effect on bromobenzene metabolism in microsomes and prevented toxicity in hepatocytes, presumably by stimulating GSH synthesis and thereby decreasing the amount of reactive metabolites available for interaction with other cellular nucleophiles. It is concluded that, in contrast to hepatocytes with normal levels of GSH, hepatocytes from diethylmaleate-treated rats were sensitive to bromobenzene toxicity under our incubation conditions. In this system, bromobenzene metabolism led to GSH depletion and was associated with a progressive decrease in coenzyme A and nicotinamide nucleotide levels and a moderate increase in the formation of metabolites covalently bound to protein. Methionine was a potent protective agent which probably acted by enhanced GSH synthesis via the formation of cystathionine.  相似文献   

2.
Freshly isolated rat hepatocytes contained a high level (30–40 nmol/106 cells) of reduced glutathione (GSH) which decreased steadily upon incubation in an amino acid containing medium lacking cysteine and methionine. This decrease in GSH level was prevented, and turned into a slight increase, when either cysteine, N-acetylcysteine, or methionine was also present in the medium. The amino acid uptake into hepatocytes was more rapid with cysteine than with methionine. Cystine was not taken up, or taken up very slowly, by the cells and could not be used to prevent the decrease in GSH level which occurred in the absence of cysteine and methionine. The level of GSH in hepatocytes freshly isolated from rats pretreated with diethylmaleate was markedly decreased (to ~5 nmol/106 cells) but increased rapidly upon incubation of the cells in a medium containing amino acids including either cysteine, N-acetylcysteine, or methionine. Again, cysteine was taken up into the cells more rapidly than methionine. The rate of uptake of cysteine was moderately enhanced in hepatocytes with a lowered level of intracellular GSH as compared to cells with normal GSH concentration. Exclusion of glutamate and/or glycine from the medium did not markedly affect the rate of resynthesis of GSH by hepatocytes incubated in the presence of exogenously added cysteine or methionine. Incubation of hepatocytes with bromobenzene in an amino acid-containing medium lacking cysteine and methionine resulted in accelerated cell damage. Addition of either cysteine, N-acetylcysteine, or methionine to the medium caused a decrease in bromobenzene toxicity. The protective effect was dependent, however, on the time of addition of the amino acid to the incubate; e.g., the effect on bromobenzene toxicity was greatly reduced when either cysteine or methionine was added after 1 h of preincubation of the hepatocytes with bromobenzene as compared to addition at zero time. This decrease in protective effect in bromobenzene-exposed cells was related to a similar decrease in the rate of uptake of cysteine and methionine into hepatocytes preincubated with bromobenzene. The rate of uptake, and incorporation into cellular protein, of leucine was also markedly inhibited in hepatocytes preincubated with bromobenzene. In contrast, there was no measurable change in the rate of release of leucine from cellular protein as a result of incubation of hepatocytes with bromobenzene. It is concluded that the presence of cysteine, N-acetylcysteine, or methionine in the medium protects hepatocytes from bromobenzene toxicity by providing intracellular cysteine for GSH biosynthesis and suggested that an inhibitory effect on amino acid uptake may contribute to the cytotoxicity of bromobenzene in hepatocytes.  相似文献   

3.
[1-14C] Arachidonic (eicosatetraenoic) acid was incubated at 37 degrees C for 15 min with rabbit liver microsomes fortified with NADPH (1 mM). The products were purified by high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) and analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Based on polarity on reversed phase HPLC, the metabolites could be divided into three groups. The major metabolites of lowest polarity were 19- and 20-hydroxyarachidonic acid and 19-oxoarachidonic acid. The major metabolites of medium polarity were two diols, 14,15-dihydroxy-5,-8,11-eicosatrienoic acid and 11,12-dihydroxy-5,8,14-eicosatrienoic acid. Microsomal incubation under atmospheric isotopic oxygen led to incorporation of only one 18O molecule in each diol, indicating that the diols could originate from breakdown of 14(15)-oxido-5,8,11-eicosatrienoic acid and 11(12)-oxido-5,8,14-eicosatrienoic acid, respectively. Major metabolites in the most polar group were 14,15,19- and 14,15,20-trihydroxy-5,8,11-eicosatrienoic acid. 11,12,19- and 11,12,20-trihydroxy-5,8,14-eicosatrienoic acid and 11,12-dihydroxy-19-oxo-5,8,-14-eicosatrienonic acid. About 0.5% of exogenous radioactively labelled arachidonic was covalently bound to microsomal proteins. The metabolites and the protein-bound products were formed in considerably smaller amounts by non-fortified microsomes. Carbon monoxide inhibited this pathway of arachidonic acid metabolism, indicating that these reactions might be catalyzed by the cytochrome P-450-linked monooxygenase systems.  相似文献   

4.
Vitamin E protection against chemical-induced toxicity to isolated hepatocytes was examined during an imbalance in the thiol redox system. Intracellular reduced glutathione (GSH) was depleted by two chemicals of distinct mechanisms of action: adriamycin, a cancer chemotherapeutic agent that undergoes redox cycling, producing reactive oxygen species that consume GSH, and ethacrynic acid, a direct depleter of GSH. The experimental system used both nonstressed vitamin E-adequate isolated rat hepatocytes and compromised hepatocytes subjected to physiologically induced stress, generated by incubation in calcium-free medium. At doses whereby intracellular GSH was near total depletion, cell injury induced by either chemical was found to follow the depletion of cellular alpha-tocopherol, regardless of the status of the GSH redox system. Changes in protein thiol contents of the cells closely paralleled the changes in alpha-tocopherol contents throughout the incubation period. Supplementation of the calcium-depleted hepatocytes with alpha-tocopheryl succinate (25 microM) markedly elevated their alpha-tocopherol content and prevented the toxicities of both drugs. The prevention of cell injury and the elevation in alpha-tocopherol contents were both associated with a prevention of the loss in cellular protein thiols in the near total absence of intracellular GSH. The mechanism of protection by vitamin E against chemical-induced toxicity to hepatocytes may therefore be an alpha-tocopherol-dependent maintenance of cellular protein thiols.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
The objective of this study was to determine whether the thiol drug, diethyldithiocarbamate (DEDC) and its two metabolites, disulfiram (DS) and carbon disulfide (CS2) could be used as inhibitors of cytochrome P-450IIE1 to protect hepatocytes from cytotoxic xenobiotics. (1) Hepatocytes isolated from rats following pyrazole administration to induce cytochrome P-450IIE1 were much more susceptible to carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) and dimethylnitrosamine (DMN) than hepatocytes from untreated rats. Microsomes isolated from P-450IIE1-induced liver were also much more effective at catalysing a NADPH-dependent metabolism of CCl4 and DMN. The activities of aniline hydroxylase and p-nitroanisole-O-demethylase increased whereas ethoxyresorufin-O-dealkylase activity was much less induced and pentoxyresorufin-O-dealkylase activity was decreased. The P-450IIE1 antibody markedly inhibited the NADPH-dependent metabolism of these compounds indicating that IIE1 is a major catalyst of the microsomal metabolism of CCl4 and DMN. (2) Hepatocytes isolated from rats treated with DEDC or its metabolites, DS and CS2, on the other hand, were resistant to CCl4 and DMN. Microsomes isolated from the liver of animals treated with DEDC or DS or CS2 were also much less effective at catalysing the NADPH-dependent metabolism of the above compounds. DEDC markedly decreased the activities of aniline hydroxylase, p-nitroanisole-O-demethylase and pentoxyresorufin-O-dealkylase but had no effect on ethoxyresorufin-O-dealkylase activity. (3) Hepatocytes isolated from pyrazole-treated rats were also more susceptible to bromobenzene (BB) and naphthalene-induced cytotoxicity than hepatocytes from untreated rats. Furthermore, DEDC or CS2 administration beforehand significantly protected hepatocytes against both xenobiotics. (4) By contrast, hepatocytes isolated from P-450IIE1 induced rats were not more susceptible to lactonitrile or cyclophosphamide. Instead, cyclophosphamide was activated by phenobarbital-induced P-450 isozymes whereas lactonitrile was activated by alcohol dehydrogenase. Hepatocytes isolated from DEDC-treated rats were also resistant to cyclophosphamide but not lactonitrile. (5) The above results suggest that P-450IIE1 catalyses the cytotoxic activation of CCl4, DMN, BB and naphthalene but not of lactonitrile or cyclophosphamide. Furthermore, the administration of DEDC and its metabolites, disulfiram or CS2, inactivates P-450IIE1 so that the hepatocytes become resistant to these hepatotoxins.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
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   

9.
Imaizumi N  Miyagi S  Aniya Y 《Life sciences》2006,78(26):2998-3006
The effect of reactive nitrogen species on rat liver microsomal glutathione S-transferase (MGST1) was investigated using microsomes and purified MGST1. When microsomes or the purified enzyme were incubated with peroxynitrite (ONOO(-)), the GST activity was increased to 2.5-6.5 fold in concentration-dependent manner and a small amount of the MGST1 dimer was detected. MGST1 activity was increased by ONOO(-) in the presence of high amounts of reducing agents including glutathione (GSH) and the activities increased by ONOO(-) or ONOO(-) plus GSH treatment were decreased by 30-40% by further incubation with dithiothreitol (DTT, reducing disulfide) or by sodium arsenite (reducing sulfenic acid). Furthermore, GSH was detected by HPLC from the MGST1 which was incubated with ONOO(-) plus GSH or S-nitrosoglutathione followed by DTT treatment. In addition, the MGST1 activity increased by nitric oxide (NO) donors such as S-nitrosoglutathione, S-nitrosocysteine or the non-thiol NO donor 1-hydroxy-2-oxo-3 (3-aminopropyl)-3-isopropyl was restored by the DTT treatment. Since DTT can reduce S-nitrosothiol and disulfide bond to thiol, S-nitrosylation and a mixed disulfide bond formation of MGST1 were suggested. Thus, it was demonstrated that MGST1 is activated by reactive nitrogen species through a forming dimeric protein, mixed disulfide bond, nitrosylation and sulfenic acid.  相似文献   

10.
The interaction of N-(4-ethoxyphenyl)p-benzoquinone imine (NEPBQI), a metabolite formed during peroxidase catalyzed metabolism of p-phenetidine, with GSH and its effects in isolated rat hepatocytes were investigated.

When reacted with GSH NEPBQI formed both a mono- and a diglutathione conjugate as well as GSSG. Formation of glutathione conjugates and GSSG also occurred when NEPBQI was added to isolated hepatocytes. The formation of GSSG was, however, only detectable if the hepatocytes had been pretreated with the GSSG reductase inhibitor BCNU (1,3-bis-(2-chloroethyl-1-nitrosourea).

Similarly, NEPBQI caused a rapid decrease in cellular free protein thiols when added to hepatocytes, however this was expressed at higher concentrations than for effects on GSH. The protein thiol decrease was correlated with protein binding of NEPBQI.

NEPBQI was also shown to be toxic to isolated hepatocytes. At a concentration of 400 μM extensive bleb formation was followed by loss of cell membrane integrity and cell death.

To assess further the subcellular metabolism of NEPBQI microsomes and cytosol was used. NEPBQI was found to be preferentially reduced by cytochrome P-450 reductase in the microsomes whereas DT-diaphorase catalyzed its reduction in cytosol. NEPBQI did not undergo significant redox cycling since no formation of O was observed. Thus, the cytotoxic effect of NEPBQI appears to be due to protein arylation rather than redox cycling.  相似文献   


11.
Previous studies in our laboratory had demonstrated that addition of alpha-naphthoflavone (ANF) to lymphocytes from smokers or polychlorinated biphenyls (PCB)s-exposed individuals caused an increase in sister chromatid exchange (SCE) frequency whereas lymphocytes from controls were relatively unaffected. In order to investigate the mechanism responsible, metabolism of ANF by uninduced and 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzodioxin (TCDD)-induced microsomes was studied as a function of microsomal protein concentration and incubation time. Nonpolar metabolites were analyzed and the amount of conjugated (polar) and protein-bound metabolites determined. The initial ANF-metabolism rate was 10-fold higher in TCDD-induced microsomes (4.9 +/- 0.6 nmol/min per mg TCDD-induced microsomal protein vs. 0.5 +/- 0.2 nmol/min per mg uninduced microsomal protein) than in uninduced microsomes. Moreover, uninduced microsomes no longer metabolize ANF after 30-40 min while TCDD-induced microsomes metabolize ANF for longer than 2 h or until all the ANF is gone. In addition to the metabolites formed by uninduced microsomes [7,8-dihydro-7,8-dihydroxy-ANF (7,8-dihydrodiol); 5,6-dihydro-5,6-dihydroxy-ANF (5,6-dihydrodiol); 5,6-oxide-ANF and 6-hydroxy-ANF], TCDD-induced microsomes from unidentified metabolites. When TCDD-induced microsomes and 40 microM ANF were added to Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells, we found a correlation between the concentration of 5,6-oxide-ANF and clastogenicity to CHO cells. However, purified 5,6-oxide-ANF did not induce SCEs in CHO cells in the absence or presence of TCDD-induced microsomes. However, a minor metabolite (identified as the 9,10-dihydro-9,10-dihydroxy-ANF by acid dehydration) formed with TCDD-induced microsomes produces clastogenicity in CHO cells. These data indicate that a minor metabolite of ANF is a potent clastogen which suggests that this metabolite may be responsible for the ANF-mediated increases in SCE frequency in lymphocytes from smokers or PCB-exposed individuals.  相似文献   

12.
Dietary copper deficiency has been shown to reduce copper-dependent superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity and to increase lipid peroxidation in rats. Circulating reduced glutathione (GSH) concentrations are elevated in copper-deficient (CuD) rats, which suggests an increased GSH synthesis or decreased degradation, perhaps as an adaptation to the oxidative stress of copper deficiency. GSH synthesis was examined in isolated hepatocytes from CuD rats. Isolated hepatocytes were prepared by collagenase perfusion and incubated in Krebs-Henseleit bicarbonate buffer, pH 7.4, 10 mM glucose, 2.5 mM Ca2+ in the presence and absence of 1.0 mM buthionine sulfoximine (BSO), a specific inhibitor of GSH synthesis. Cell viability was assessed by trypan blue exclusion. GSH and oxidized glutathione (GSSG) were measured by the glutathione reductase recycling assay. Copper deficiency depressed hepatocyte Cu by greater than 90% and increased intracellular GSH by 41-117% over the 3-h incubation, with a two- to threefold increase in the rate of intracellular GSH synthesis. Intracellular GSSG values were minimally influenced by CuD, with a constant mol% GSSG. Extracellular total glutathione (GSH + 2GSSG) synthesis was increased by approximately 33%. Both intracellular GSH and extracellular total glutathione synthesis were inhibited by BSO. The pattern of food consumption in CuD rats, meal fed versus ad libitum fed, had no effect on glutathione synthesis. The results indicate an increased hepatic GSH synthesis as a response to dietary copper deficiency and suggest an interrelationship between the essential nutrients involved in oxyradical metabolism.  相似文献   

13.
We studied mefloquine metabolism in cells and microsomes isolated from human and animal (monkey, dog, rat) livers. In both hepatocytes and microsomes, mefloquine underwent conversion to two major metabolites, carboxymefloquine and hydroxymefloquine. In human cells and microsomes these metabolites only were formed, as already demonstrated in vivo, while in other species several unidentified metabolites were also detected. After a 48 hr incubation with human and rat hepatocytes, metabolites accounted for 55-65% of the initial drug concentration, whereas in monkey and dog hepatocytes, mefloquine was entirely metabolized after 15 and 39 hrs, respectively. The consumption of mefloquine was less extensive in microsomes, and unchanged drug represented 60% (monkey) to 85-100% (human, dog, rat) of the total radioactivity after 5 hr incubations. The involvement of the cytochrome P450 3A subfamily in mefloquine biotransformation was suggested by several lines of evidence. Firstly, mefloquine metabolism was strongly increased in hepatic microsomes from dexamethasone-pretreated rats, and also in human and rat hepatocytes after prior treatment with a cytochrome P450 3A inducer. Secondly, mefloquine biotransformation in rifampycin-induced human hepatocytes was inhibited in a concentration-dependent manner by the cytochrome P450 3A inhibitor ketoconazole and thirdly, a strong correlation was found between erythromycin-N-demethylase activity (mediated by cytochrome P450 3A) and mefloquine metabolism in human microsomes (r=0.81, P < 0.05, N=13). Collectively, these findings concerning the role of cytochrome P450 3A in mefloquine metabolism may have important in vivo consequences especially with regard to the choice of agents used in multidrug antimalarial regimens.  相似文献   

14.
The metabolism of nitroprusside by hepatocytes or subcellular fractions involves a one-electron reduction of nitroprusside to the corresponding metal-nitroxyl radical. Thiol compounds also reduced nitroprusside to the metal-nitroxyl radical apparently via a thiol adduct. The nitroprusside reduction by microsomes was shown to be due to cytochrome P450 reductase as an antibody to cytochrome P450 reductase inhibits the microsomal reduction of nitroprusside, and the inhibitors of cytochrome P450 such as carbon monoxide or metyrapone had no effect. The reduction of nitroprusside by mitochondria in the presence of NADH or NADPH also produced the metal-nitroxyl radical. In hepatocytes, both mitochondria and the cytochrome P450 reductase are involved in the reduction of nitroprusside. The reductive metabolism of nitroprusside was found to produce toxic by-products, namely, free cyanide anion and hydrogen peroxide. We have also detected thiyl radicals formed in the thiol compound reduction of NP. We propose that cyanide and hydrogen peroxide are important toxic species formed in the metabolism of nitroprusside. The rate of reductive metabolism of nitroprusside by rat hepatocytes was much higher than with human erythrocytes. Therefore the major site of nitroprusside metabolism in vivo may be liver and not blood as originally proposed.  相似文献   

15.
Rough and smooth microsomes and Golgi membranes were incubated with UDP[14C]galactose and the incorporation of radioactivity into the lipid extract and into endogenous protein acceptors were measured. Antagonistic pyrophosphatases were inhibited with ATP and interference from β-galactosidase activity was greatly decreased by carrying out the incubation at pH 7.8. After incubation the particles were centrifuged to remove free oligosaccharide residues. Radioactivity was found in the lipid extract from Golgi membranes but not from rough and smooth microsomes. This radioactivity, however, was not associated with dolichol or retinyl phosphates. The incorporation of radioactivity into proteins of the Golgi fraction was more than double than that of the microsomal fractions. In addition, the transferases in these two types of particles exhibited different properties. Trypsin treatment of intact rough microsomal vesicles, smooth vesicles and Golgi membranes removed about 5, 15 and 50%, respectively, of newly incorporated protein-bound galactose, indicating that the proportion of the newly galactosylated proteins, which are localized at the cytoplasmic surface of the membrane, is lowest in rough microsomes, intermediate in smooth, and highest in Golgi membranes.  相似文献   

16.
The glycoproteins of microsomes and cytosol were studied. Various washing procedures did not release the proteins from the microsomes, and immunological tests demonstrated that the sialoproteins are not serum components. Low concentrations of deoxycholate and incubation in 0.25 M sucrose solution liberated a small amount of microsomal sialoprotein and this fraction exhibited a high degree of labeling of protein-bound N-acetylneuraminic acid. A part of the glycoprotein fraction could not be solubilized, even with a high concentration of the detergent. Thoroughly perfused rat liver contained sialoproteins in the particle-free supernate. The level of sialoprotein present could not be due to contamination with serum or broken organelles. The high in vivo incorporation of [3H]glucosamine into protein-bound sialic acid of Golgi membranes and cytosol was paralleled by a delayed and lesser rate of incorporation into the rough and smooth microsomal membranes. This incorporation pattern suggests the possibility that the glycoproteins of cytosol and Golgi may later be incorporated into the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

17.
The effects of menadione (2-methyl-1,4-naphthoquinone) metabolism on intracellular soluble and protein-bound thiols were investigated in freshly isolated rat hepatocytes. Menadione was found to cause a dose-dependent decrease in intracellular glutathione (GSH) level by three different mechanisms: (a) Oxidation of GSH to glutathione disulfide (GSSG) accounted for 75% of the total GSH loss; (b) About 15% of the cellular GSH reacted directly with menadione to produce a GSH-menadione conjugate which, once formed, was excreted by the cells into the medium; (c) A small amount of GSH (approximately 10%) was recovered by reductive treatment of cell protein with NaBH4, indicating that GSH-protein mixed disulfides were also formed as a result of menadione metabolism. Incubation of hepatocytes with high concentrations of menadione (greater than 200 microM) also induced a marked decrease in protein sulfhydryl groups; this was due to arylation as well as oxidation. Binding of menadione represented, however, a relatively small fraction of the total loss of cellular sulfhydryl groups, since it was possible to recover about 80% of the protein thiols by reductive treatments which did not affect protein binding. This suggests that the loss of protein sulfhydryl groups, like that of GSH, was mainly a result of oxidative processes occurring within the cell during the metabolism of menadione.  相似文献   

18.
Liver microsomal preparations are routinely used to predict drug interactions that can occur in vivo as a result of inhibition of cytochrome P450 (CYP)-mediated metabolism. However, the concentration of free drug (substrate and inhibitor) at its intrahepatic site of action, a variable that cannot be directly measured, may be significantly different from that in microsomal incubation systems. Intact cells more closely reflect the environment to which CYP substrates and inhibitors are exposed in the liver, and it may therefore be desirable to assess the potential of a drug to cause CYP inhibition in isolated hepatocytes. The objective of this study was to compare the inhibitory potencies of a series of CYP2D inhibitors in rat liver microsomes and hepatocytes. For this, we developed an assay suitable for rapid analysis of CYP-mediated drug interactions in both systems, using radiolabelled dextromethorphan, a well-characterized probe substrate for enzymes of the CYP2D family. Dextromethorphan demethylation exhibited saturable kinetics in rat microsomes and hepatocytes, with apparent Km and Vmax values of 2.1 vs. 2.8 microM and 0.74 nM x min(-1) per mg microsomal protein vs. 0.11 nM x min(-1) per mg cellular protein, respectively. Quinine, quinidine, pyrilamine, propafenone, verapamil, ketoconazole and terfenadine inhibited dextromethorphan O-demethylation in rat liver microsomes and hepatocytes with IC50 values in the low micromolar range. Some of these compounds exhibited biphasic inhibition kinetics, indicative of interaction with more than one CYP2D isoform. Even though no important differences in inhibitory potencies were observed between the two systems, most inhibitors, including quinine and quinidine, displayed 2-3-fold lower IC50 in hepatocytes than in microsomes. The cell-associated concentrations of quinine and quinidine were found to be significantly higher than those in the extracellular medium, suggesting that intracellular accumulation may potentiate the effect of these compounds. Studies of CYP inhibition in intact hepatocytes may be warranted for compounds that concentrate in the liver as the result of cellular transport.  相似文献   

19.
Suspensions of freshly isolated rat hepatocytes and renal tubular cells contain high levels of reduced glutathione (GSH), which exhibits half-lives of 3-5 and 0.7-1 h, respectively. In both cells types the availability of intracellular cysteine is rate limiting for GSH biosynthesis. In hepatocytes, methionine is actively converted to cysteine via the cystathionine pathway, and hepatic glutathione biosynthesis is stimulated by the presence of methionine in the medium. In contrast, extracellular cystine can support renal glutathione synthesis; several disulfides, including cystine, are rapidly taken up by renal cells (but not by hepatocytes) and are reduced to the corresponding thiols via a GSH-linked reaction sequence catalyzed by thiol transferase and glutathione reductase (NAD(P)H). During incubation, hepatocytes release both GSH and glutathione disulfide (GSSG) into the medium; the rate of GSSG efflux is markedly enhanced during hydroperoxide metabolism by glutathione peroxidase. This may lead to GSH depletion and cell injury; the latter seems to be initiated by a perturbation of cellular calcium homeostasis occurring in the glutathione-depleted state. In contrast to hepatocytes, renal cells metabolize extracellular glutathione and glutathione S-conjugates formed during drug biotransformation to the component amino acids and N-acetyl-cysteine S-conjugates, respectively. In addition, renal cells contain a thiol oxidase acting on extracellular GSH and several other thiols. In conclusion, our findings with isolated cells mimic the physiological situation characterized by hepatic synthesis and renal degradation of plasma glutathione and glutathione S-conjugates, and elucidate some of the underlying biochemical mechanisms.  相似文献   

20.
Glutathione (GSH) plays a major role in cytoprotection, acting as a nucleophile trap for reactive species derived from xenobiotics. This has led to the development of an assay for the detection of reactive species generated by liver microsomal metabolism of xenobiotics. This assay has been used extensively to study reactive metabolites which initiate toxicity through a direct (non-immunological) mechanism, but there are few data on its ability to detect reactive metabolites that initiate toxicity through neo-antigen formation, or to detect xenobiotics that cause GSH loss by oxidation mediated by a redox cycling process. Accordingly, the ability of rat and human liver microsomes to metabolize xenobiotics to GSH-depleting metabolites has been investigated further. Of the five neo-antigen-forming xenobiotics tested, four (amodiaquine, phenobarbitone, procainamide, and sulphanilamide) displayed GSH reactivity that was either dependent or independent (amodiaquine) on metabolism. The other neo-antigen-forming xenobiotic (carbamazepine) was inactive in all microsomal samples tested. Four quinones believed to exert toxcity through arylation (1,4-benzoquinone) and/or redox cycling (duroquinone, menadione, mitomycin c) displayed GSH reactivity, as did nitrofurantoin and diquat, two other redox cycling xenobiotics. Induction of the mixed function oxidase system with Aroclor afforded little advantage when using rat liver microsomes, whilst there was considerable inter-individual variation in the ability of human liver microsomes to mediate metabolism-dependent GSH depletion. It is concluded that the liver microsome GSH depletion assay may be of general utility as a screen for a number of xenobiotic-derived reactive species.  相似文献   

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