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1.
We aimed to determine the status of iron in mediating oxidant-induced damage to cultured bovine aortic endothelial cells. Chromium-51-labeled cells were exposed to reaction mixtures of xanthine oxidase/hypoxanthine and glucose oxidase/glucose; these produce superoxide and hydrogen peroxide, or hydrogen peroxide, respectively. Xanthine oxidase caused a dose dependent increase of 51Cr release. Damage was prevented by allopurinol, oxypurinol, and extracellular catalase, but not by superoxide dismutase. Prevention of xanthine oxidase-in-duced damage by catalase was blocked by an inhibitor of catalase, aminotriazole. Glucose oxidase also caused a dose-dependent increase of 51Ci release. Glucose oxidase-induced injury, which was catalase-inhibitable, was not prevented by extracellular superoxide dismutase. Both addition of and pretreatment with deferoxamine (a chelator of Fe3+) prevented glucose oxidase-induced injury. The presence of phenanthroline (a chelator of divalent Fe2+) prevented glucose oxidase-induced 51Cr release, whereas pretreatment with the agent did not. Apotransferrin (a membrane impermeable iron binding protein) failed to influence damage. Neither deferoxamine nor phenanthroline influenced cellular antioxidant defenses, or inhibited lysis by non-oxidant toxic agents. Treatment with allopurinol and oxypurinol, which inhibited cellular xanthine oxidase, failed to prevent glucose oxidase injury. We conclude that (1) among the oxygen species extracellularly generated by xanthine oxidase/hypoxanthine, hydrogen peroxide induces damage via a reaction on cellular iron; (2) deferoxamine and phenanthroline protect cells by chelating Fe3+ and Fe2+, respectively; and (3) reduction of cellular stored iron (Fe3+) to Fe2+ may be a prerequisite for mediation of oxidantinduced injury, but this occurs independently of extracellular superoxide or cellular xanthine oxidase-derived superoxide. © 1994 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
  • 1 This article is a US Government work and, as such, is in the public domain in the United States of America.
  •   相似文献   

    2.
    Oxidant injury to the alveolar epithelium can be mediated by exposure to oxidant gases such as O2 at high concentrations and O3, inflammatory cell-derived reactive O2 species, and the intracellular metabolism of xenobiotics such as paraquat. An in vitro model of alveolar epithelial oxidant injury was developed based on exposure of cultured rat type II pneumocytes to superoxide and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) enzymatically generated in the culture medium. Cytotoxicity was assessed by the release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) into the culture medium, which was a more reliable indicator of damage than release of 51Cr by prelabeled cells. Incubation of cells for 6-8 h with xanthine plus xanthine oxidase and glucose plus glucose oxidase induced the release of greater than 50% of total intracellular LDH. Oxidant exposure also resulted in significant detachment of cells from culture dishes. Modulation of oxidant damage was accomplished using liposomes as vectors for the delivery of catalase. Treatment of cells with catalase liposomes for 2 h resulted in augmentation of cellular catalase specific activities up to 631% of controls. Catalase was partitioned into intracellular and surface-associated compartments in catalase liposome-treated cells. Partial and complete protection against oxidant injury, induced by xanthine plus xanthine oxidase and glucose plus glucose oxidase, respectively, was achieved by pretreatment of cells with catalase liposomes. LDH release during oxidant exposure was inversely related to augmentation of cellular catalase activities. Catalase liposome-treated cells also exhibited an enhanced ability to scavenge enzymatically generated H2O2 from the culture medium. These observations suggest a useful approach to modulation of alveolar injury induced by reactive O2 species.  相似文献   

    3.
    The ability of transferrin to potentiate oxygen free radical-mediated endothelial cell injury was assessed. 51Cr-labeled endothelial cells derived from rat pulmonary arteries (RPAECs) were incubated with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) in the presence and absence of holosaturated human transferrin, and the effect of transferrin on H2O2-mediated endothelial cell toxicity was determined. Addition of holosaturated transferrin potentiated H2O2-mediated RPAEC cytotoxicity at concentrations of H2O2 greater than 10 microM, suggesting that transferrin may provide a source of iron for free radical-mediated endothelial cell injury. Free radical-mediated injury is dependent on non-protein-bound iron. The ability of RPAECs to facilitate the release of iron from transferrin was assessed. We determined that RPAECs facilitate the release of transferrin-derived iron by reduction of transferrin-bound ferric iron (Fe3+) to ferrous iron (Fe2+). The reduction and release of transferrin-derived Fe2+ were inhibited by apotransferrin and chloroquine, indicating a dependence on receptor-specific binding of transferrin to the RPAEC cell surface, with subsequent endocytosis, acidification, and reduction of transferrin-bound Fe3+ to Fe2+. The release of transferrin-derived Fe2+ was potentiated by diethyldithiocarbamate, an inhibitor of intracellular superoxide dismutase (SOD). In contrast, exogenous SOD did not alter iron release, suggesting that intracellular superoxide anion (O2-) may play an important role in mediating the reduction and release of transferrin-derived iron. Results of this study suggest that transferrin may provide a source of iron for oxygen free radical-mediated endothelial cell injury and identify a novel mechanism by which endothelial cells may mediate the reduction and release of transferrin-derived iron.  相似文献   

    4.
    The present studies were carried out to characterize the nature of reactive oxygen species generated by the xanthine-xanthine oxidase system involved in the release of histamine by noncytotoxic and cytotoxic mechanisms. To distinguish secretory release from lytic release, mast cells were loaded with 51Cr and the release of 51Cr into the incubation medium was used as a measure of cell lysis. The secretory release of histamine was not inhibited by superoxide dismutase or catalase alone. However, together these agents inhibited the release. This suggests that the combination of superoxide and hydrogen peroxide can evoke secretory release. The lytic release of histamine, as monitored by concomitant release of 51Cr from mast cells at higher concentration of xanthine oxidase or longer periods of incubation, seems to be related to hydrogen peroxide production since catalase inhibited the cell lysis. Since it has been reported that exogenously added hydrogen peroxide at concentrations below 10 mM did not induce cell lysis, the lytic release, although hydrogen peroxide dependent, may not be due to its direct effect on the cell surface. The cell lysis observed in the xanthine-xanthine oxidase system seems to be brought about by a complex mechanism involving the interactions of hydrogen peroxide and superoxide with cellular components. These studies indicate that the beneficial effects of superoxide dismutase seen in biological systems may partly be due to inhibition of the secretory processes stimulated by superoxide.  相似文献   

    5.
    Cultured hepatocytes pretreated with the ferric iron chelator deferoxamine were resistant to the toxicity of H2O2 generated by either glucose oxidase or by the metabolism of menadione (2-methyl-1,4-naphthoquinone). Ferric, ferrous, or cupric ions restored the sensitivity of the cells to H2O2. Deferoxamine added to hepatocytes previously treated with this chelator prevented the restoration of cell killing by only ferric iron. The free radical scavengers mannitol, thiourea, benzoate, and 4-methylmercapto-2-oxobutyrate protected either native cells exposed to H2O2 or pretreated hepatocytes exposed to H2O2 and given ferric or ferrous iron. Superoxide dismutase prevented the killing of native hepatocytes by either glucose oxidase or menadione. With deferoxamine-pretreated hepatocytes, superoxide dismutase prevented the cell killing dependent upon the addition of ferric but not ferrous iron. Catalase prevented the killing by menadione of deferoxamine-pretreated hepatocytes given either ferric or ferrous iron. Deferoxamine pretreatment did not prevent the toxicity of t-butyl hydroperoxide but did, however, prevent that of cumene hydroperoxide. It is concluded that both ferric iron and superoxide ions are required for the killing of cultured hepatocytes by H2O2. The toxicity of H2O2 is also dependent upon its reaction with ferrous iron to form hydroxyl radicals by the Fenton reaction. The ferrous iron needed for this reaction is formed by the reduction of cellular ferric iron by superoxide ions. Such a sequence corresponds to the so-called iron-catalyzed Haber-Weiss reaction, and the present report documents its participation in the killing of intact hepatocytes by H2O2. Cumene hydroperoxide but not t-butyl hydroperoxide closely models the toxicity of hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

    6.
    The synthesis of hyaluronic acid by bovine articular cartilage in culture was inhibited after treatment with xanthine oxidase and hypoxanthine. Through the use of catalase, superoxide dismutase and the specific iron chelator diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid, the active species responsible for inhibition was shown to be hydrogen peroxide. Hydrogen peroxide generated by glucose oxidase was also inhibitory. Some recovery of hyaluronic synthesis was evident after a further period of culturing. Proteoglycan synthesis was inhibited in parallel with hyaluronic acid synthesis.  相似文献   

    7.
    The involvement of "free" iron in damage caused by oxidative stress is well recognized. Superoxide generated in a short burst and at a relatively high flux by the xanthine/xanthine oxidase couple is known to release iron from ferritin in the presence of phenanthroline derivatives as iron chelators. However, superoxide generation via xanthine oxidase is accompanied by the simultaneous direct generation of hydrogen peroxide and, in the presence of ferritin, there is also a superoxide-independent release of iron. In this study it was found that the iron chelator employed attenuates superoxide formation from the xanthine/xanthine oxidase couple. The reaction of ferritin and transferrin with a clean chemical source of superoxide, di(4-carboxybenzyl)hyponitrite (SOTS-1) was therefore investigated. The efficiency of superoxide-induced iron release from ferritin increases dramatically as the superoxide flux is decreased, reaching as high as 0.5 Fe per O2*-. Treatment of ferritin for 16 h with SOTS-1 yielded as many as 130 Fe atoms/ferritin molecule, which greatly exceeds the amount of possible "contaminating" iron absorbed on the protein shell.  相似文献   

    8.
    《Free radical research》2013,47(3):203-213
    In HeLa cells evidence is provided that active oxygen species such as hydrogen peroxide and superoxide at low levels are important growth regulatory signals. They may constitute a novel regulatory redox system of control superimposed upon the established cell growth signal transduction pathways. Whilst for example hydrogen peroxide can be added exogenously to elicit growth responses in these cells, it is clear that cellularly generated superoxide and hydrogen peroxide are important. Experiments with superoxide dismutase, superoxide dismutase mimics and inhibitors of both superoxide dismutase and xanthine oxidase suggest that superoxide generated intracellularly and superoxide released extracellularly are both relevant to growth control in HeLa cells.  相似文献   

    9.
    In HeLa cells evidence is provided that active oxygen species such as hydrogen peroxide and superoxide at low levels are important growth regulatory signals. They may constitute a novel regulatory redox system of control superimposed upon the established cell growth signal transduction pathways. Whilst for example hydrogen peroxide can be added exogenously to elicit growth responses in these cells, it is clear that cellularly generated superoxide and hydrogen peroxide are important. Experiments with superoxide dismutase, superoxide dismutase mimics and inhibitors of both superoxide dismutase and xanthine oxidase suggest that superoxide generated intracellularly and superoxide released extracellularly are both relevant to growth control in HeLa cells.  相似文献   

    10.
    Oxygen radicals are suspected as being a cause of the cellular damage that occurs at sites of inflammation. The phagocytic cells that accumulate in areas of inflammation produce superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, hydroxyl radical, and probably singlet oxygen in the extracellular fluid. The mechanism by which these oxygen molecules kill cells is unknown. To determine which of the oxygen species is responsible for the cellular killing, we exposed human fibroblasts in culture to oxygen radicals generated by the enzymatic action of xanthine oxidase upon acetaldehyde. Using the amount of chromium-51 released from labeled fibroblasts as an index of cellular death, we found that cells were protected only by interventions that reduce hydrogen peroxide concentration. Agents that inactivate superoxide, hydroxyl radical, and singlet oxygen were ineffective in limiting oxygen radical-induced cellular death.  相似文献   

    11.
    Summary Culture conditions modulating cell damage from xanthine plus xanthine oxidase-derived partially reduced oxygen species were studied. Porcine thoracic aorta endothelial cells and porcine lung fibroblasts were maintained in monolayer culture. Cells were prelabeled with51Cr before xanthine plus xanthine oxidase exposure. Endothelial cells showed 30 to 100% more lysis than fibroblasts and thus seemed more sensitive to this oxidant stress. The effect of cell culture age, as indicated by population doubling level (PDL), was examined. Response of low PDL endothelial cells and fibroblasts subjected to oxidant stress was compared with the response of PDL 15 cells. Both low PDL endothelial cells and fibroblasts responded differently to the lytic effect of xanthine oxidase-derived free radicals than did higher PDL cells. Specific activities of the antioxidant enzymes catalase, managanese superoxide dismutase, copper-zinc superoxide dismutase, glutathione peroxidase, and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase were measured in both low and high PDL fibroblasts and endothelial cells. Antioxidant enzyme specific activities could only partially explain the differences in response to oxidant stress between fibroblasts and endothelial cells and between low and high PDL cells. Cell culture medium composition modulated the rate of production, and relative proportions of xanthine plus xanthine oxidase-derived partially reduced species of oxygen, i.e. superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, and hydroxyl radical. Serum content of medium was important in modulating free radical generation; superoxide production rates decreased 32%, H2O2 became undetectable, and hydroxyl radical generation decreased 54% in the presence of 10% serum. The medium protein and iron content also modulated free radical generation. The data suggest that cell culture media constituents, cell type, and cell culture age greatly affect in vitro response of cells subjected to oxidant stress. Research supported by American Lung Association Fellowship Training Grant and Research Training Grant, the R. J. Reynolds Corporation, and National Institutes of Health Grants HL29784 and 1 HL 23805.  相似文献   

    12.
    Clinical and experimental data indicate that activated oxygen species interfere with vascular endothelial cell function. Here, the impact of extracellular oxidant injury on the fibrinolytic response of cultured human umbilical vein endothelial (HUVE) cells was investigated at the protein and mRNA levels. Xanthine (50 microM) and xanthine oxidase (100 milliunits), which produces the superoxide anion radical (O2-) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), was used to sublethally injure HUVE cells. Following a 15-min exposure, washed cells were incubated for up to 24 h in serum-free culture medium. Tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-PA) antigen, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) antigen, and PAI-1 activity were determined in 1.25 ml of conditioned medium and t-PA and PAI-1 mRNA in the cell extracts of 2 x 10(6) HUVE cells. Control cells secreted 3.9 +/- 1.3 ng/ml (mean +/- S.D., n = 12) within 24 h. Treatment with xanthine/xanthine oxidase for 15 min induced a 2.8 +/- 0.4-fold increase (n = 12, p less than 0.05) of t-PA antigen secretion after 24 h. The t-PA antigen was recovered predominantly in complex with PAI-1. The oxidant injury caused a 3.0 +/- 0.8-fold increase (n = 9, p less than 0.05) in t-PA mRNA within 2 h. Total protein synthesis was unaltered by xanthine/xanthine oxidase. The oxidant scavengers superoxide dismutase and catalase, in combination, abolished the effect of xanthine/xanthine oxidase on t-PA secretion and t-PA mRNA synthesis. Xanthine/xanthine oxidase treatment of HUVE cells did not affect the PAI-1 secretion in conditioned medium nor the PAI-1 mRNA levels in cell extracts. Thus extracellular oxidant injury induces t-PA but not PAI-1 synthesis in HUVE cells.  相似文献   

    13.
    We have shown, in a preliminary report, that macrophages can induce strand breaks in the DNA of co-cultured tumor cells (Chong et al., 1988). The present study is designed to determine if oxygen-centered species generated by the cell-free enzyme-substrate combination of hypoxanthine and xanthine oxidase can induce similar lesions and to identify the specific mediator(s). We report that co-incubation of murine mammary tumor cell lines with hypoxanthine and xanthine oxidase leads to the induction of DNA-strand breaks as determined by fluorescence analysis of DNA unwinding (FADU) assay or alkaline elution techniques. This damage is preventable by catalase which removes hydrogen peroxide but no protection is provided by agents to remove or prevent the formation of superoxide anion (superoxide dismutase), or hydroxyl radical (mannitol or the iron chelator o-phenanthroline). Likewise, cyclooxygenase or lipoxygenase inhibitors of arachidonate metabolism (indomethacin, nordihydroguaiaretic acid, caffeic acid) or bromophenacyl bromide do not alter the degree of DNA scission. Treatment with higher doses of oxygen species leads to significant toxicity as determined by evaluation of cell growth potential or colony-forming ability. Again, toxicity is prevented only by the presence of catalase. Tumor cells are able to rejoin strand breaks at lower, less toxic doses. When comparing different tumor cell subpopulations at various stages of progression, i.e., metastatic vs. nonmetastatic, for sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide-induced strand breakage, we found that at lower concentrations (less than 5μM) metastatic populations are sensitive whereas nonmetastatic populations exhibit no significant breakage. At higher concentrations of hydrogen peroxide, all lines were sensitive, suggesting that a lower threshold of sensitivity may exist for more progressed tumour cell lines.  相似文献   

    14.
    The endothelium is a key site of injury from reactive oxygen species that can potentially be protected by the antioxidant enzymes superoxide dismutase and catalase. Large proteins, such as superoxide dismutase and catalase, do not readily penetrate cell membranes, which limits their efficacy in protecting cells from cellular reactions involving both intracellularly and extracellularly generated reactive oxygen species. Two methods are described that promote enzyme delivery to cultured endothelial cells and confer increased resistance to oxidative stress. The first method is to entrap the antioxidant enzymes within liposomes, which then become incorporated by endothelial cells and can increase enzyme specific activities by as much as 44-fold within 2 h. The second method involves covalent conjugation of polyethylene glycol (PEG) to superoxide dismutase and catalase, a technique that increases circulatory half-life and reduces protein immunogenicity. Conjugation of PEG to superoxide dismutase and catalase increased cellular-specific activities of these enzymes in cultured endothelial cells (but at a slower rate than for liposome entrapped enzymes) and rendered these cells more resistant to oxidative stress. Both liposome-mediated delivery and PEG conjugation offer an additional benefit over native superoxide dismutase and catalase because they can increase cellular antioxidant activities in a manner that can provide protection from both intracellular and extracellular superoxide and hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

    15.
    Rat heart ornithine decarboxylate activity from isoproterenol-treated rats was inactivated in vitro by reactive species of oxygen generated by the reaction xanthine/xanthine oxidase. Reduced glutathione, dithiothreitol and superoxide dismutase has a protective effect in homogenates and in partially purified ornithine decarboxylase exposed to the xanthine/xanthine oxidase reaction, while diethyldithiocarbamate, which is an inhibitor of superoxide dismutase, potentiated the damage induced by O2- on enzyme activity. Dithiothreitol at concentrations above 1.25 mM had an inhibitory effect upon supernatant ornithine decarboxylase activity, while at 2.5 mM it was most effective in the recovery of ornithine decarboxylase activity, after the purification of the enzyme by the ammonium sulphate precipitation procedure. The ornithine decarboxylase inactivated by the xanthine/xanthine oxidase reaction showed a higher value of Km and a reduction of Vmax with respect to control activity. The exposure of rats to 100% oxygen for 3 h reduced significantly the isoproterenol-induced heart ornithine decarboxylase activity. The injection with diethyldithiocarbamate 1 h before hyperoxic exposure further reduced heart ornithine decarboxylase activity.  相似文献   

    16.
    Active oxygen species are suspected as being a cause of the cellular damage that occurs at the site of inflammation. Phagocytic cells accumulate at these sites and produce superoxide ion, hydrogen peroxide and hydroxyl radical. The ultimate killing species, the cellular target and the mechanism whereby the lethal injury is produced are unknown. We exposed mouse fibroblasts to xanthine oxidase and acetaldehyde, a system which mimics the membrane of phagocytic cells in terms of production of oxygen species. We observed that the generation of these species produced DNA strand breaks and cellular death. The metal chelator o-phenanthroline completely abolished the former effect, and at the same time it effectively protected the cells from lethal injuries. Because complexing iron o-phenanthroline prevents the formation of hydroxyl radical by the Fendon reaction (Fe(II) + H2O2----Fe(III) + OH- + OH.), it is proposed that most of the cell death and DNA damage are brought about by OH radical, produced from other species by iron-mediated reactions.  相似文献   

    17.
    The reaction of xanthine and xanthine oxidase generates superoxide and hydrogen peroxide. In contrast to earlier works, recent spin trapping data (Kuppusamy, P., and Zweier, J.L. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 9880-9884) suggested that hydroxyl radical may also be a product of this reaction. Determining if hydroxyl radical results directly from the xanthine/xanthine oxidase reaction is important for 1) interpreting experimental data in which this reaction is used as a model of oxidant stress, and 2) understanding the pathogenesis of ischemia/reperfusion injury. Consequently, we evaluated the conditions required for hydroxyl radical generation during the oxidation of xanthine by xanthine oxidase. Following the addition of some, but not all, commercial preparations of xanthine oxidase to a mixture of xanthine, deferoxamine, and either 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide or a combination of alpha-phenyl-N-tert-butyl-nitrone and dimethyl sulfoxide, hydroxyl radical-derived spin adducts were detected. With other preparations, no evidence of hydroxyl radical formation was noted. Xanthine oxidase preparations that generated hydroxyl radical had greater iron associated with them, suggesting that adventitious iron was a possible contributing factor. Consistent with this hypothesis, addition of H2O2, in the absence of xanthine, to "high iron" xanthine oxidase preparations generated hydroxyl radical. Substitution of a different iron chelator, diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid for deferoxamine, or preincubation of high iron xanthine oxidase preparations with chelating resin, or overnight dialysis of the enzyme against deferoxamine decreased or eliminated hydroxyl radical generation without altering the rate of superoxide production. Therefore, hydroxyl radical does not appear to be a product of the oxidation of xanthine by xanthine oxidase. However, commercial xanthine oxidase preparations may contain adventitious iron bound to the enzyme, which can catalyze hydroxyl radical formation from hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

    18.
    Quantitation of intracellular oxidation in a renal epithelial cell line   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
    We quantitated the presence of intracellular oxidizing species in response to oxidative stimuli using fluorescent cell analytic techniques. The studies were performed with a laser-activated flow cytometry system using 2',7'-dichlorofluorescin diacetate (DCFDA) as a probe for intracellular oxidation events. Oxygen radical formation was initiated by the addition of FeCl2 or xanthine oxidase to the culture media. Xanthine oxidase and FeCl2 both increased intracellular DCFDA oxidation over control (p less than .001). Increases in intracellular DCFDA oxidation in response to xanthine oxidase exposure were inhibited by extracellular superoxide dismutase, catalase and dimethyl sulfoxide (p less than 0.001), implicating the superoxide anion, hydrogen peroxide, and the hydroxyl radical in producing the changes in intracellular dichlorofluorescein fluorescence. Increases in intracellular DCFDA oxidation in response to xanthine oxidase correlated with loss of cellular viability, as established by decreased plating efficiency. We conclude that relative intracellular oxidation can be quantitated within the cultured renal cell and that some extracellularly generated radicals may be capable of traversing the intact cell membrane to oxidize DCFDA in the cell interior.  相似文献   

    19.
    Inhibitors of endocytosis have been used to show that internalization of superoxide dismutase is required for the enzyme to protect hepatocytes from the cytotoxicity of hydrogen peroxide. As shown previously (Starke, P. E., and Farber, J. L. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 10099-10104), superoxide dismutase prevented the killing of cultured hepatocytes by H2O2 generated in the medium by glucose oxidase. Five inhibitors of endocytosis, methylamine, monensin, benzyl alcohol, cytochalasin B, and oligomycin, each abolished the protective effect of superoxide dismutase. Cell-associated superoxide dismutase activity was increased 4-fold in hepatocytes after exposure to superoxide dismutase for 1 h. Each of the inhibitors abolished this increase in the cell-associated superoxide dismutase activity. The uptake of horseradish peroxidase, a measure of fluid phase endocytosis, differed from that of superoxide dismutase in its lower rate, reduced sensitivity to methylamine, and its insensitivity to cytochalasin B. The results of the present study demonstrate that endocytosis of superoxide dismutase is required to protect hepatocytes from the cytotoxicity of hydrogen peroxide. This conclusion may account for some of the conflicting results in the literature with respect to the protective action of superoxide dismutase.  相似文献   

    20.
    This study was undertaken to examine the effects of oxygen free radicals on mitochondrial creatine kinase activity in rat heart. Xanthine plus xanthine oxidase (superoxide anion radical generating system) reduced mitochondrial creatine kinase activity both in a dose- and a time-dependent manner. Superoxide dismutase showed a protective effect on depression in creatine kinase activity due to xanthine plus xanthine oxidase. Hydrogen peroxide inhibited creatine kinase activity in a dose-dependent manner, this inhibition was protected by the addition of catalase. In order to understand the detailed mechanisms by which oxygen free radicals inhibit mitochondrial creatine kinase activity, the effects of oxygen free radicals on mitochondrial sulfhydryl groups were examined. Mitochondrial sulfhydryl groups contents were decreased by xanthine plus xanthine oxidase or hydrogen peroxide; this depression in sulfhydryl groups contents was prevented by the addition of superoxide dismutase or catalase. N-Ethylmaleimide (sulfhydryl group reagent) expressed inhibitory effects on the creatine kinase activity both in a dose- and a time-dependent manner; dithiothreitol or cysteine (sulfhydryl group reductant) showed protective effects on the creatine kinase activity depression induced by N-ethylmaleimide. Dithiothreitol or cysteine also blocked the depression of mitochondrial creatine kinase activity caused by xanthine plus xanthine oxidase or hydrogen peroxide. These results lead us to conclude that oxygen free radicals may inhibit mitochondrial creatine kinase activity by modifying sulfhydryl groups in the enzyme protein.  相似文献   

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