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1.
The effect of zinc on various pulmonary cell lines has been studied by measuring the depletion of total cellular glutathione after exposure to zinc(II) chloride at different concentrations. Total cellular glutathione (cGS) was measured at 31 ± 3 nmol/mg, 3.8 ± 0.6 nmol/mg, and 3.7 ±1.2 nmol/mg protein in A549, L2, and 11Lu cells, respectively. After treatment with buthionine sulfoximine (BSO), the cGS levels decreased by 20% in A549 cells and below 0.2 nmol/mg in L2 and 11Lu cells. Exposure of A549 cells to 25–200 μM ZnCl2 for 4 h alone decreased the cGS content to 60–80%. There was little additional effect in BSO-pretreated cells. In L2 and 11Lu cells, the decrease of cGS was 70–85% following exposure to 15–150 μM ZnCl2 for 2 h. If BSO was also used, the decrease in cGS was 85–95% in L2 cells and 75–85% in 11Lu cells. Exposure to 25–250 μM ZnCl2 for 2 h diminished protein synthesis as determined by radiolabeled methionine incorporation, with half-maximum inhibition (EC50) from 40–160 μM ZnCl2. To attain similar EC50 values in BSO-pretreated cells, only about half the zinc concentrations were required as compared to cells without pretreatment. The decrease of cGS was accompanied by an increased ratio of oxidized : reduced glutathione that was more pronounced in cells with low glutathione content.  相似文献   

2.
Zinc-mediated cytotoxicity is recognized, at least in part, by a decrease of reduced glutathione (GSH) and an increase in the oxidized form of glutathione (GSSG). Doxorubicin is a common inducer of multidrug-resistance-associated proteins and such proteins might, furthermore, be associated by an increased GSSG export rate. Therefore, zinc-mediated toxicity should be abolished after doxorubicin pretreatment. In the present study, zinc toxicity was characterized by methionine incorporation, glutathione content, and the GSSG/GSH ratio. Experiments were performed in three established lung cell lines comparing doxorubicin-pretreated cells with controls. Zinc-mediated toxicity was significantly decreased after pretreatment with doxorubicin as assessed by methionine-incorporation inhibition, GSH depletion, and/or GSSG increase in the two nonmalignant cell lines. Unexpectedly, zinc-associated GSSG export was not increased after doxorubicin pretreatment. This inconsistency might be explained as a result of a decreased zinc content in these cells, probably because of an increased export rate of zinc. The findings are in contradiction to the opinion of metal excretion by multidrug-resistance-associated proteins, matched to GSH conjugate excretion, as it is discussed for cadmium, for example.  相似文献   

3.
Reduced toxicity of high zinc exposure was observed after pretreatment of various lung cells with nonlethal zinc concentrations. This effect became significant when various parameters of cytotoxicity were assessed (e.g., inhibition of protein synthesis, depletion of reduced glutathione [GSH], increase of oxidized glutathione [GSSG], release of lactate dehydrogenase [LDH]). Similar protective effects by zinc have already been shown by several investigators for a variety of toxicity studies dealing with cadmium, in vitro and in vivo. Zinc-induced toxicity has been linked to glutathione metabolism and cellular GSH contents. Activity of glutathione reductase (GR) and rates of glutathione synthesis were identified as determinants of zinc (cyto)toxicity. However, these variables were virtually unaffected in our adapted cells. Consequently, another variable appears to be crucial for modulating cellular suscepticibility in zinc pretreated cells. Protection in our cells was achieved by pretreatment with 80–120 μmol/L zinc chloride for 24–72 h, roughly 10-fold more zinc in the medium than is normally found in human plasma. Protection was not observed when the cells were concomitantly exposed to cycloheximide, an inhibitor of protein synthesis, or actinomycin D, an inhibitor of RNA synthesis, but it was found in the presence of amanitin, an inhibitor of mRNA synthesis. It is therefore concluded that the altered zinc tolerance of pretreated cells is not attributable to the induction of metallothionein.  相似文献   

4.
Treatment of A549 human lung carcinoma cells with L-buthionine-[S,R]-sulfoximine (BSO) results concomitantly in cellular glutathione (GSH) depletion and growth inhibition. The nature of BSO effects on cell growth and the relationships between BSO inhibition of cell growth and BSO effects on cellular GSH levels were determined in this study. A dose dependent effect of BSO on cell growth was observed, but this effect was found not to correlate with BSO effects on cellular GSH levels. Treatment with BSO for 60 h at concentrations of 5 and 10 mM was found to deplete cellular GSH at similar rates and to an undetectable level (below 0.5 nmol/mg protein). However, cessation of growth occured in 10 mM BSO whereas growth continued at better than one half the control rate in 5 mM BSO. The results suggest there may be a distinct threshold level of intracellular G GSH (on the order of or less than 0.5 nmol/mg protein) required for cell growth and for cells to protect themselves from the antiproliferative effects of BSO. At a concentration of 10 mM, BSO inhibited both DNA and protein synthesis and arrested growth of A549 cells throughout rather than at a specific phase of the cell cycle. BSO inhibition of growth was not, as indicated by colony-forming efficiency (CFE) and electron microscopy studies, accompanied by indications of cytotoxic effects. A stimulatory effect of 0.1 mM BSO on the growth of A549 cells was found also.Abbreviations BSO L-buthionine-[S,R]-sulfoximine - GSH Glutathione (reduced form) - GSSG Glutathione disulfide - DTNB 5,5-dithiobis (2-nitrobenzoate) - PBS Phosphate buffered saline - BSA Bovine serum albumin - PI Propidium iodide - CFE Colony-forming efficiency - EM Electron microscopy  相似文献   

5.
To study the relationship between glutathione and rooting, tomato seedling cuttings, grown on basal- or on auxin-supplemented media, were treated with the reduced (GSH) or oxidized (GSSG) form of this antioxidant. In turn, the consequences of the depletion of GSH pool on rooting were tested using l-buthionine sulfoximine (BSO), a specific inhibitor of GSH biosynthesis. Effects of the aforementioned treatments on rooting response were assessed. GSH treatment promoted root formation on cuttings grown on both basal- and auxin-supplemented media. Whereas GSSG did not affect the number of roots formed by cuttings grown on basal medium, it strongly enhanced the rooting stimulatory effect of auxin treatment. GSH depletion resulting from BSO application did not change the number of roots formed. All the tested compounds, namely GSH, GSSG, BSO and auxin, had a strong inhibitory effect on the elongation of regenerated roots. Supplementing the rooting medium with glutathione efficiently increased the GSH level in the rooting zones, while addition of BSO led to a strong decrease in endogenous GSH level. Neither of the treatments affected the level of GSSG. Exogenous auxin affect neither GSH nor GSSG levels in rooting zones; however, in the regenerated roots, GSH level was significantly higher when the organs were formed on auxin-supplemented medium. Patterns of GSH distribution in the roots regenerated on basal- and auxin-enriched media were studied using the GSH-specific dye monochlorobimane and confocal laser scanning microscopy. GSH was found in the root apical meristem and in the elongation zone. Auxin did not change the GSH distribution; however, the number of fluorescent cells was higher when roots were regenerated on auxin-supplemented medium.  相似文献   

6.
In order to clarify the role of oxidative processes in cytotoxicity we have studied the metabolism and toxicity of 2-methyl-1,4-naphthoquinone (menadione) and its 2,3 dimethyl (DMNQ) and 2,3 diethyl (DENQ) analogs in isolated rat hepatocytes. The two analogs, unlike menadione, cannot alkylate nucleophiles directly and were considerably less toxic than menadione. This decreased toxicity was consistent with the inability of DMNQ and DENQ to alkylate but we also found them to undergo lower rates of redox cycling in hepatocytes and a higher ratio of two electron as opposed to one electron reduction relative to menadione. Thus, facile analysis of the respective roles of alkylation and oxidation in cytotoxicity was not possible using these compounds. In hepatocytes pretreated with bischloroethyl-nitrosourea (BCNU) to inhibit glutathione reductase, all three naphthoquinones caused a potentiation of reduced glutathione (GSH) removal/oxidized glutathione (GSSG) generation and cytotoxicity relative to that observed in control cells. These data show that inhibition of hepatocyte glutathione reductase by BCNU results in enhanced naphthoquinone-induced oxidative challenge and subsequent cellular toxicity. That DMNQ and DENQ are cytotoxic, albeit at high concentrations, and that this cytotoxicity is potentiated by BCNU pretreatment suggest that oxidative processes alone can be a determinant of cytotoxicity.  相似文献   

7.
A decline in reduced glutathione (GSH) levels is associated with aging and many age-related diseases. The objective of this study was to determine whether other antioxidants can compensate for GSH depletion in protection against oxidative insults. Rabbit lens epithelial cells were depleted of > 75% of intracellular GSH by 25-200 microM buthionine sulfoximine (BSO). Depletion of GSH by BSO alone had little direct effect on cell viability, but resulted in an approximately 30-fold increase in susceptibility to H(2)O(2)-induced cell death. Experimentally enhanced levels of nonprotein sulfhydryls other than GSH (i.e., N-acetylcysteine) did not protect GSH-depleted cells from H(2)O(2)-induced cell death. In contrast, pretreatment of cells with vitamin C (25-50 microM) or vitamin E (5-40 microM), restored the resistance of GSH-depleted cells to H(2)O(2). However, concentrations of vitamin C > 400 microM and vitamin E > 80 microM enhanced the toxic effect of H(2)O(2). Although levels of GSH actually decreased by 10-20% in cells supplemented with vitamin C or vitamin E, the protective effects of vitamin C and vitamin E on BSO-treated cells were associated with significant ( approximately 70%) decreases in oxidized glutathione (GSSG) and concomitant restoration of the cellular redox status (as indicated by GSH:GSSG ratio) to levels detected in cells not treated with BSO. These results demonstrate a role for vitamin C and vitamin E in maintaining glutathione in its reduced form. The ability of vitamin C and vitamin E in compensations for GSH depletion to protect against H(2)O(2)-induced cell death suggests that GSH, vitamin C, and vitamin E have common targets in their actions against oxidative damage, and supports the preventive or therapeutic use of vitamin C and E to combat age- and pathology-associated declines in GSH. Moreover, levels of these nutrients must be optimized to achieve the maximal benefit.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of changes in both the intracellular glutathione (GSH) concentration and the concentration of extracellular reducing equivalents on the aerobic radiosensitization was studied in three cell lines: CHO-10B4, V79, and A549. Intracellular GSH was metabolically depleted after the inhibition of GSH synthesis by buthionine sulfoximine (BSO), while the extracellular environment was controlled through the replacement of growth medium with a thiol-free salt solution and in some experiments by the exogenous addition of either GSH or GSSG. Each of the cell lines examined exhibited an enhanced aerobic radioresponse when the intracellular GSH was extensively depleted (GSH less than 1 nmol GSH/10(6) cells after 1.0 mM BSO/24 h treatment) and the complexity of the extracellular milieu decreased. Although the addition of oxidized glutathione (5 mM GSSG/30 min) to cells prior to irradiation was without effect, much or all of the induced radiosensitivity was overcome by the addition of reduced glutathione (5 mM GSH/15 min). However, the observation that the exogenous GSH addition restores the control radioresponse without increasing the intracellular GSH concentration was entirely unexpected. These results suggest that a number of factors exert an influence on the extent of GSH depletion and determine the extent of aerobic radiosensitization. Furthermore, the interaction of exogenous GSH with--but without penetrating--the cell membrane is sufficient to result in radiorecovery.  相似文献   

9.
We studied the intracellular content of reduced (GSH) and oxidized (GSSG) glutathione, glutathione reductase activity, glutathione-S-transferase, and ascorbate peroxidase in morphogenic and nonmorphogenic Tatar buckwheat calli during the culture cycle as well as under the treatment with D,L-buthionine-S,R-sulfoximine (BSO), an inhibitor of γ-glutamylcysteine synthase, the first enzyme of glutathione biosynthesis. We found that, during passaging, cultures only slightly differed in total glutathione content; however, the content of GSH was higher in the morphogenic culture, whereas the content of GSSG was higher in the nonmorphogenic culture. In the morphogenic callus, the glutathione-S-transferase activity was 10–20 times higher and the glutathione reductase activity was 2–2.5 times lower than in the nonmorphogenic callus. Under the treatment with BSO, the decrease in the GSH content in the morphogenic callus was temporary (on day 6–8 of passage), whereas that in the nonmorphogenic callus decreased within a day and remained lower than in the control throughout the entire passage. In the morphogenic callus, BSO did not affect the content of GSSG, whereas it caused GSSG accumulation in the nonmorphogenic callus. These differences are probably due to the fact that, in the BSO-containing medium, glutathione reductase is activated in the morphogenic callus and, conversely, inhibited in the nonmorphogenic callus. Although BSO caused a decrease in the total glutathione content only in the nonmorphogenic culture, the cytostatic effect of BSO was more pronounced in the morphogenic callus. In addition, BSO also had a negative effect on the differentiation of proembryonic cell complexes in the morphogenic callus. The role of the glutathione redox status in maintaining the embryogenic activity of cultured plant cells is discussed.  相似文献   

10.
A mechanistic study was performed to elucidate the biochemical events connected with the cocarcinogenic effect of sulfur dioxide (SO2). Glutathione S-sulfonate (GSSO3H), a competitive inhibitor of the glutathione S-transferases, forms in lung cells exposed in culture to sulfite, the hydrated form of SO2. Changes in glutathione status (total GSH) were also observed during a 1-h exposure. Some cells were pretreated with 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU) to inhibit glutathione reductase. In human lung cells GSSO3H formed in a concentration-dependent manner, while glutathione (GSH) increased and glutathione disulfide (GSSG) decreased as the extracellular sulfite concentration was increased from 0 to 20 mM. The ratio of GSH/GSSG increased greater than 5-fold and the GSH/GSSO3H ratio decreased to 10 with increasing sulfite concentration. GSSO3H formed in rat lung cells exposed to sulfite, with no detectable effect on GSH and GSSG. GSSO3H also formed from cellular GSH mixed disulfides. GSSO3H formed rapidly, reaching its maximum value in 15 min. The viability of both cell types was unaffected except at 20 mM sulfite. GSSO3H incubated with human lung cells did not affect cellular viability. BCNU inhibited cellular GSSO3H reductase to the same extent as GSSG reductase. These results indicate that GSSO3H is formed in cells exposed to sulfite, and could be the active metabolite of sulfite responsible for the cocarcinogenic effect of SO2 by inhibiting conjugation of electrophiles by GSH.  相似文献   

11.
Manganese (Mn) is neurotoxic: the underlying mechanisms have not been fully elucidated. l-Buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine (BSO) is an irreversible inhibitor of γ-glutamylcysteine synthetase, an important enzyme in glutathione (GSH) synthesis. To test the hypothesis that BSO modulates Mn toxicity, we investigated the effects of treatment of U-87 or SK-N-SH cells with MnCl2, BSO, or MnCl2 plus BSO. We monitored cell viability using MTT assay, staining with HO-33342 to assess live and/or apoptotic cells, and staining with propidium iodide (PI) to assess necrotic cells; we also measured cellular glutathione. Our results indicate decreased viability in both cell types when treated with MnCl2 or BSO: Mn was more toxic to SK-N-SH cells, whereas BSO was more toxic to U-87 cells. Because BSO treatment accentuated Mn toxicity in both cell lines, GSH may act to combat Mn toxicity. Thus, further investigation in oxidative stress mediated by glutathione depletion will unravel new Mn toxicity mechanism(s).  相似文献   

12.
The glutathione (GSH)-dependent antioxidant system has been demonstrated to inhibit atherosclerosis. Macrophage CD36 uptakes oxidized low density lipoprotein (oxLDL) thereby facilitating foam cell formation and development of atherosclerosis. It remains unknown if GSH can influence macrophage CD36 expression and cellular oxLDL uptake directly. Herein we report that treatment of macrophages with l-buthionine-S,R-sulfoximine (BSO) decreased cellular GSH production and ratios of GSH to glutathione disulfide (GSH/GSSG) while increasing production of reactive oxygen species. Associated with decreased GSH levels, macrophage CD36 expression was increased, which resulted in enhanced cellular oxLDL uptake. In contrast, N-acetyl cysteine and antioxidant enzyme (catalase or superoxide dismutase) blocked BSO-induced CD36 expression as well as oxLDL uptake. In vivo, administration of mice with BSO increased CD36 expression in peritoneal macrophages and kidneys. BSO had no effect on CD36 mRNA expression and promoter activity but still induced CD36 protein expression in macrophages lacking peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ expression, suggesting it induced CD36 expression at the translational level. Indeed, we determined that BSO enhanced CD36 translational efficiency. Taken together, our study demonstrates that cellular GSH levels and GSH/GSSG status can regulate macrophage CD36 expression and cellular oxLDL uptake and demonstrate an important anti-atherogenic function of the GSH-dependent antioxidant system by providing a novel molecular mechanism.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Glutathione content and growth in A549 human lung carcinoma cells   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The relationship between glutathione content and cell growth was investigated in A549 human lung carcinoma cells. A decreased cellular glutathione content was achieved by exposing the cells to L-buthionine-SR-sulfoximine (BSO). It also occurred in these cells as they approached their plateau phase of growth. During exponential growth, a lower initial glutathione content correlated with a longer lag phase in subcultured cells. Further, depletion of cellular glutathione by BSO inhibited cell growth. This inhibition became apparent 36 h after the addition of BSO. These observations raise the possibility that a critical concentration of GSH may be required for optimal growth of A549 human lung carcinoma cells.  相似文献   

15.
The inhibition of glutathione (GSH) synthesis by -buthionine-SR-sulfoximine (BSO) causes aggravation of hepatotoxicity of paraquat (PQ), an oxidative-stress inducing substance, in mice. On the other hand, synthesis of metallothionein (MT), a cysteine-rich protein having radical scavenging activity, is induced by PQ, and the induction by PQ is significantly enhanced by pretreatment of mice with BSO. The purpose of present study is to examine whether generation of reactive oxygens is involved in the induction of MT synthesis by PQ under inhibition of GSH synthesis. Administration of PQ to BSO-pretreated mice increased hepatic lipid peroxidation and frequency of DNA single strand breakage followed by manifestation of the liver injury and induction of MT synthesis. Both vitamin E and deferoxamine prevented MT induction as well as lipid peroxidation in the liver of mice caused by administration of BSO and PQ. In cultured colon 26 cells, both cytotoxicity and the increase in MT mRNA level caused by PQ were significantly enhanced by pretreatment with BSO. Facilitation of PQ-induced reactive oxygen generation was also observed by BSO treatment. These results suggest that reactive oxygens generated by PQ under inhibition of GSH synthesis may stimulate MT synthesis. GSH depletion markedly increased reactive oxygen generation induced by PQ, probably due to the reduced cellular capability to remove the radical species produced.  相似文献   

16.
Inhibition of glutathione disulfide reductase by glutathione   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Rat-liver glutathione disulfide reductase is significantly inhibited by physiological concentrations of the product, glutathione. GSH is a noncompetitive inhibitor against GSSG and an uncompetitive inhibitor against NADPH at saturating concentrations of the fixed substrate. In both cases, the inhibition by GSH is parabolic, consistent with the requirement for 2 eq. of GSH in the reverse reaction. The inhibition of GSSG reduction by physiological levels of the product, GSH, would result in a significantly more oxidizing intracellular environment than would be realized in the absence of inhibition. Considering inhibition by the high intracellular concentration of GSH, the steady-state concentration of GSSG required to maintain a basal glutathione peroxidase flux of 300 nmol/min/g in rat liver is estimated at 8-9 microM, about 1000-fold higher than the concentration of GSSG predicted from the equilibrium constant for glutathione reductase. The kinetic properties of glutathione reductase also provide a rationale for the increased glutathione (GSSG) efflux observed when cells are exposed to oxidative stress. The resulting decrease in intracellular GSH relieves the noncompetitive inhibition of glutathione reductase and results in an increased capacity (Vmax) and decreased Km for GSSG.  相似文献   

17.
The proteasome inhibitors lactacystin, clastro lactacystin beta-lactone, or tri-leucine vinyl sulfone (NLVS), in the presence of [(35)S]cysteine/methionine, caused increased incorporation of (35)S into cellular proteins, even when protein synthesis was inhibited by cycloheximide. This effect was blocked by incubation with the glutathione synthesis inhibitor buthionine sulfoximine. Proteasome inhibitors also enhanced total glutathione levels, increased reduced/oxidized glutathione ratio (GSH/GSSG) and upregulated gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase (rate-limiting in glutathione synthesis). Micromolar concentrations of GSH, GSSG, or cysteine stimulated the chymotrypsin-like activity of purified 20S proteasome, but millimolar GSH or GSSG was inhibitory. Interestingly, GSH did not affect 20S proteasome's trypsin-like activity. Enhanced proteasome glutathiolation was verified when purified preparations of the 20S core enzyme complex were incubated with [(35)S]GSH after pre-incubation with any of the inhibitors. NLVS, lactacystin or clastro lactacystin beta-lactone may promote structural modification of the 20S core proteasome, with increased exposure of cysteine residues, which are prone to S-thiolation. Three main conclusions can be drawn from the present work. First, proteasome inhibitors alter cellular glutathione metabolism. Second, proteasome glutathiolation is enhanced by inhibitors but still occurs in their absence, at physiological GSH and GSSG levels. Third, proteasome glutathiolation seems to be a previously unknown mechanism of proteasome regulation in vivo.  相似文献   

18.
Limited data in animal models suggest that colonic mucosa undergoes adaptive growth following massive small bowel resection (SBR). In vitro data suggest that intestinal cell growth is regulated by reactive oxygen species and redox couples [e.g., glutathione (GSH)/glutathione disulfide (GSSG) and cysteine (Cys)/cystine (CySS) redox]. We investigated the effects of SBR and alterations in redox on colonic growth indexes in rats after either small bowel transection (TX) or 80% midjejunoileal resection (RX). Rats were pair fed +/- blockade of endogenous GSH synthesis with buthionine sulfoximine (BSO). Indexes of colonic growth, proliferation, and apoptosis and GSH/GSSG and Cys/CySS redox potentials (E(h)) were determined. RX significantly increased colonic crypt depth, number of cells per crypt, and epithelial cell proliferation [crypt cell bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation]. Administration of BSO markedly decreased colonic mucosal GSH, GSSG, and Cys concentrations in both TX and RX groups, with a resultant oxidation of GSH/GSSG and Cys/CySS E(h). BSO did not alter colonic crypt cell apoptosis but significantly increased all colonic mucosal growth indexes (crypt depth, cells/crypt, and BrdU incorporation) in both TX and RX groups in a time- and dose-dependent manner. BSO significantly decreased plasma GSH and GSSG, oxidized GSH/GSSG E(h), and increased plasma Cys and CySS concentrations. Collectively, these data provide in vivo evidence indicating that oxidized colonic mucosal redox status stimulates colonic mucosal growth in rats. The data also suggest that GSH is required to maintain normal colonic and plasma Cys/CySS homeostasis in these animal models.  相似文献   

19.
Squalene monohydroperoxide (Sq-OOH), the initial product of ultraviolet-peroxidated squalene, was used to investigate the effect of peroxidative challenge upon the glutathione contents in rabbit ear skin and primary-cultured fibroblasts derived from rabbit ear skin. The cellular reduced glutathione (GSH) contents decreased during 30-minute incubations in vitro with Sq-OOH, and oxidized glutathione (GSSG) was formed concomitantly, indicating that Sq-OOH had a potential for GSH-depleting activity in vitro. When Sq-OOH was applied topically to the skin in vivo, only GSSG contents increased significantly within 30 minutes. Moreover, pretreatment with the GSH depletors, DL-buthionine sulfoximine (BSO) and diethyl maleate (DEM), could potentiate the cytotoxicity and comedogenicity induced by Sq-OOH. These findings suggest that the endogenous antioxidant, glutathione, is quite sensitive to Sq-OOH and may be an important material for protecting cells and/or tissues against the oxidative stress induced by Sq-OOH treatment.  相似文献   

20.
The addition of external GSSG at concentrations in the range 50-500 microM produces in isolated adult rat heart myocytes an increase of GSH level and only a slight increase of GSSG level. On the contrary, external GSH at the above same indicated concentrations did not change the cell glutathione pool. The pretreatment of the cells with diethylamaleate depleted the myocytes of glutathione and enhanced the GSSG-induced replenishment effect on GSH level. On the contrary, the addition of GSH did not increase the concentration of cell glutathione. The level of cell GSH in diethylmaleate-treated myocytes was not increased after 30 min of incubation with cysteine, or acetylcysteine. The GSSG induced-stimulation on GSH level was not inhibited by buthionine sulfoximine, an inhibitor of glutathione synthesis. On the contrary, this stimulatory effect was inhibited by N, N-bis(2-chloroethyl)-N-nitrosourea, an inhibitor of glutathione reductase, or partially, by the remotion of glucose from the incubation medium. These results support the idea that the isolated adult rat heart myocytes are able to utilize external GSSG in order to increase the intracellular glutathione pool, probably through the reduction of the imported GSSG to GSH.  相似文献   

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