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1.
The haloalkane 1,2-dibromo-3-chloropropane (DBCP), an environmental pollutant that was widely used as a soil fumigant, is a carcinogen and a mutagen and displays target-organ toxicity to the testes and the kidneys. Because little is known about effects of stereochemistry on the metabolism and toxicity of halogenated alkyl compounds and because DBCP, which has a chiral center at C-2, may show enantioselectivity in its metabolism and/or toxicities, the optically pure enantiomers of DBCP were tested in vivo in rats for organ toxicity as well as for bacterial mutagenicity. Organ toxicity studies showed that (S)-DBCP was slightly more renal toxic than (R)-DBCP but was not significantly more toxic than the racemate, and that no significant differences were observed in the extents of testicular necrosis and atrophy caused by either enantiomer or the racemate. In contrast, (R)-DBCP was more mutagenic than either (S)-DBCP or the racemate to Salmonella typhimurium (S. typhimurium) strains TA 100 and TA104. However, there was little or no enantioselectivity in glutathione S-transferase (GST)-catalyzed conjugation reactions of glutathione with DBCP based on the lack of selectivity in the rates of disappearance of the enantiomers of DBCP in the presence of glutathione (GSH) and GSTs as monitored by chiral gas chromatography (GC). © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

2.
Acyl-adenylates and acyl-CoA thioesters of bile acids (BAs) are reactive acyl-linked metabolites that have been shown to undergo transacylation-type reactions with the thiol group of glutathione (GSH), leading to the formation of thioester-linked GSH conjugates. In the current study, we examined the transformation of cholyl-adenylate (CA-AMP) and cholyl-coenzyme A thioester (CA-CoA) into a cholyl-S-acyl GSH (CA-GSH) conjugate by rat hepatic glutathione S-transferase (GST). The reaction product was analyzed by liquid chromatography (LC)/electrospray ionization (ESI)-linear ion trap mass spectrometry (MS). The GST-catalyzed formation of CA-GSH occurred with both CA-AMP and CA-CoA. Ursodeoxycholic acid, lithocholic acid, and 2,2,4,4-2H4-labeled lithocholic acid were administered orally to biliary fistula rats, and their corresponding GSH conjugates were identified in bile by LC/ESI-MS2. These in vitro and in vivo studies confirm a new mode of BA conjugation in which BAs are transformed into their GSH conjugates via their acyl-linked intermediary metabolites by the catalytic action of GST in the liver, and the GSH conjugates are then excreted into the bile.  相似文献   

3.
G L Foureman  D J Reed 《Biochemistry》1987,26(7):2028-2033
The formation of S-[2-(N7-guanyl)ethyl]glutathione (GEG) from dihaloethanes is postulated to occur through two intermediates: the S-(2-haloethyl)glutathione conjugate and the corresponding episulfonium ion. We report the formation of GEG when deoxyguanosine (dG) was incubated with chemically synthesized S-(2-chloroethyl)glutathione (CEG). The depurination of GEG was shown to be first order with a half-life of 7.4 +/- 0.4 h at 27 degrees C. Evidence is also presented for the formation of S-[2-(N7-guanyl)ethyl]-L-cysteine (GEC) in incubation mixtures containing dG and S-(2-chloroethyl)-L-cysteine (CEC), the corresponding cysteine conjugate of CEG. This finding demonstrates that this (haloethyl)cysteine conjugate does not require activation by enzymatic action of cysteine conjugate beta-lyase but, instead, can directly alkylate DNA. The half-life of the depurination of GEC was 6.5 +/- 0.9 h, which is no different from that of GEG. Of the two conjugates, CEC is a somewhat more active alkylating agent toward dG than CEG as N7-guanylic adduct was detected in reaction mixtures with lower concentrations of CEC than with CEG.  相似文献   

4.
A primary pathway for metabolism of electrophilic compounds in Schistosoma japonicum involves glutathione S-transferase (SjGST)-catalyzed formation of glutathione (GSH) conjugates. As part of a program aimed at gaining a better understanding of the defense system of parasites, a series of aromatic halides (1-8), aliphatic halides (9, 10), epoxides (11-20), alpha,beta-unsaturated esters (21, 22), and alpha,beta-unsaturated amides (23, 24) were prepared, and their participation in glutathione conjugate formation was evaluated. Products from enzymatic and nonenzymatic reactions of these substances with glutathione were characterized and quantified by using reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), NMR, and fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry (FAB-MS) analysis. Mechanisms for formation of specific mono(glutathionyl) or bis(glutathionyl) conjugates are proposed. Although the results of this effort indicate that SjGST does not catalyze addition or substitution reactions of 1, 3, 4, 7-9, 11-13, 15-17, 19-21, and 24, they demonstrate that 2, 5, 6, 14, 18, and 23 undergo efficient enzyme-catalyzed conjugation reactions. The kcat values for SjGST with 23 and 18 are about 886-fold and 14-fold, respectively, larger than that for 5. This observation suggests that 23 is a good substrate in comparison to other electrophiles. Furthermore, the initially formed conjugation product, 23a, is also a substrate for SjGST in a process that forms the bis(glutathionyl) conjugate 23b. Products arising by enzymatic and nonenzymatic pathways are generated under the conditions of SjGST-activated GSH conjugation. Interestingly, production of nonenzymatic GSH conjugates with electrophilic substrates often overwhelms the activity of the enzyme. The nonenzymatic GSH conjugates, 9a-11a, 16a, 21a, and 22a, are inhibitors of SjGST with respective IC50 values of 1.95, 75.5, 0.96, 19.0, 152, and 0.36 microM, and they display moderate inhibitory activities against human GSTA2. Direct evidence has been gained for substrate inhibition by 10 toward SjGST and GSTA2 that is more potent than that of its GSH conjugate 10a. The significance of this work is found in the development of a convenient NMR-based technique that can be used to characterize glutathione conjugates derived from small molecule libraries as part of efforts aimed at uncovering specific potent SjGST and GSTA2 inhibitors. This method has potential in applications to the identification of novel inhibitors of other GST targets that are of chemotherapeutic interest.  相似文献   

5.
Excretion of glutathione conjugates by primary cultured rat hepatocytes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Conjugation of xenobiotics with glutathione occurs commonly within the liver, and these glutathione conjugates are then preferentially excreted into bile. We have characterized this excretory process using primary cultured hepatocytes (24 h). 1-Chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene rapidly entered the cells and formed a glutathione conjugate, S-(dinitrophenyl)glutathione, irrespective of the temperature of incubation. In contrast, the efflux of the glutathione conjugate was essentially absent in the cold but recovered rapidly upon rewarming of the cells. Therefore, initial rates of efflux of the conjugate at 37 degrees C were measured from cells preloaded biosynthetically at 10 degrees C. Efflux was a saturable process with respect to intracellular S-(dinitrophenyl)glutathione with an apparent Km of 0.58 +/- 0.12 mM and Vmax of 0.15 +/- 0.05 nmol/min/mg of protein. The excretion of S-(dinitrophenyl)glutathione had an energy of activation of 15.3 kcal/mol. The glutathione conjugate of p-nitrobenzylchloride when formed within the hepatocytes acted as a competitive inhibitor of S-(dinitrophenyl)glutathione efflux. Cultured hepatocytes, therefore, appeared to have a specific transport process for the excretion of glutathione conjugates. The addition of S-(dinitrophenyl)glutathione, but not GSH, GSSG, or methionine, to the medium caused a decrease in the rate of efflux of radiolabeled S-(dinitrophenyl)glutathione. The hepatocytes were able, however, to excrete the glutathione conjugate against an excess of extracellular S-(dinitrophenyl)glutathione. This observation suggested that extracellular S-(dinitrophenyl)glutathione, although capable of binding to the carrier, entered the hepatocytes quite slowly relative to rates of efflux. This carrier may function in a manner that would minimize the reuptake by hepatocytes of conjugates that have been excreted into the bile.  相似文献   

6.
The formation of thioester-linked glutathione (GSH) conjugates of bile acids (BAs) is presumed to occur via trans-acylation reactions between GSH and reactive acyl-linked metabolites of BAs. The present study examines the chemical reactivity of cholyl-adenylate and cholyl-CoA thioester, acyl-linked metabolites of cholic acid (CA), with GSH to form CA-GSH conjugate in vitro. The authentic specimen of CA-GSH was synthesized along with GSH conjugates of four common BAs found in the human body. Their structures were confirmed by proton-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and electrospray ionization (ESI)-tandem mass spectrometry in positive- and negative-ion modes. Incubation of cholyl-adenylate or cholyl-CoA thioester with GSH was carried out at pH 7.5 and 37 degrees C for 30 min, with analysis of the reaction mixture by liquid chromatography/ESI-tandem mass spectrometry, where CA-GSH was detected on the product ion mass chromatograms monitored with stable and abundant dehydrated positive-ion [M+HH(2)O](+) at m/z 680.3 and fragmented negative-ion [GSHH](-) at m/z 306.0, and was definitely identified by CID spectra by comparison with those of the authentic sample. The results show that both cholyl-adenylate and cholyl-CoA thioester are able to acylate GSH in vitro.  相似文献   

7.
While exogenous toxic compounds such as herbicides are thought to be sequestered into vacuoles in the form of glutathione (GSH) conjugates, little is understood about natural plant products conjugated with GSH. To identify natural products conjugated with GSH in plants, metabolites in the Arabidopsis γ-glutamyl transpeptidase (ggt) 4 knockout mutants that are blocked in the degradation of GSH conjugates in the vacuole were compared with those in wild-type plants. Among the metabolites identified, one was confirmed to be the 12-oxo-phytodienoic acid (OPDA)-GSH conjugate, indicating that OPDA, a precursor of jasmonic acid (JA), is transported into the vacuole as a GSH conjugate.  相似文献   

8.
Acyl-adenylates and acyl-CoA thioesters of bile acids (BAs) are reactive acyl-linked metabolites that have been shown to acylate the thiol group of glutathione (GSH); the reaction is catalyzed by glutathione S-transferase (GST) and the product is a thioester-linked BA-GSH conjugate. Such GSH conjugates are present in bile in lithocholic acid and ursodeoxycholic acid dosed-rats. To determine whether such novel BA-GSH conjugates are present in the bile of normal rats, we first synthesized the GSH conjugates of the major and minor biliary BAs of the rat and defined their MS and proton NMR properties. We then analyzed the BA-GSH composition in the bile of anesthetized biliary fistula rats by means of liquid chromatographic separation and electrospray ionization–linear ion trap mass spectrometric detection in negative- and positive-ion scan modes, monitoring characteristic transitions of the analytes. GSH conjugates of cholic, ω-muricholic, hyodeoxycholic, deoxycholic, 12-oxolithocholic, and lithocholic acids were present with concentrations in the range of 1.4–2.8 nmol/ml, some four orders of magnitude less than those of natural BA N-acyl amidates. Our results indicate that BA-GSH conjugates are formed and excreted in bile in the healthy rat, although this novel mode of BA conjugation is a very minor pathway.  相似文献   

9.
Using two peroxidative systems (prostaglandin H synthase/arachidonic acid and horseradish peroxidase/H2O2) we observed GSH conjugate formation with a number of compounds including polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon-diols (PAH-diols), insecticides, and steroids. Several of the conjugates were characterized by chromatography, uv-vis spectrophotometry, and FAB mass spectroscopy. Conjugate formation is dependent upon a functioning peroxidase, GSH, and is markedly enhanced (3- to 10-fold) by the inclusion of a number of reducing cosubstrates including phenol, uric acid, phenylbutazone, and acetaminophen. The mechanism of conjugate formation appears to involve addition of thiyl radical to alkene bonds conjugated to an electron releasing group probably by resonance stabilization of the carbon-centered radical intermediate. Thiyl radicals are formed either directly by GSH reduction of the peroxidase or indirectly by GSH reduction of radicals formed from reducing cosubstrates. The nitrone spin trap, 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide, which traps thiyl radicals, totally inhibits production of GSH conjugates in both peroxidative systems. Conjugation of PAH-diols, some of which are penultimate carcinogens, would prevent their metabolism to the diol-epoxides, an ultimate carcinogenic species of PAH. Conjugation by peroxidases appears to be a general pathway for glutathione conjugate formation that may lead to potential detoxification of chemicals.  相似文献   

10.
The cysteine S conjugate of 1,2-dichloroethane, S-(2-chloroethyl)-DL-cysteine (CEC), is hepatotoxic, nephrotoxic, and mutagenic. To determine the cellular and chemical mechanisms involved in CEC-induced toxicity and to assess the role of an episulfonium ion, the effect of CEC on the viability of isolated rat hepatocytes was studied. CEC addition resulted in both a time- and concentration-dependent loss of cell viability. Depletion of intracellular glutathione concentrations (greater than 70%) and inhibition of microsomal Ca2+ transport and Ca2+-ATPase activity preceded the loss of cell viability, and initiation of lipid peroxidation paralleled the loss of viability. The depletion of glutathione concentrations was partially attributable to a reaction between glutathione and CEC to form S-[2-(DL-cysteinyl)ethyl]glutathione, which was identified by NMR and mass spectrometry. N-Acetyl-L-cysteine, vitamin E, and N,N'-diphenyl-p-phenylenediamine protected against the loss of cell viability. N,N'-Diphenyl-p-phenylenediamine inhibited CEC-initiated lipid peroxidation but did not protect against cell death at 4 h, indicating that lipid peroxidation was not the cause of cell death. The analogues S-ethyl-L-cysteine, S-(3-chloropropyl)-DL-cysteine, and S-(2-hydroxyethyl)-L-cysteine, which cannot form an episulfonium ion, were not cytotoxic, thus demonstrating a role for an episulfonium ion in the cytotoxicity associated with exposure to CEC and, possibly, 1,2-dichloroethane. These results show that an alteration in Ca2+ homeostasis and the generation of an electrophilic intermediate may be involved in the mechanism of cell death.  相似文献   

11.
S Nair  S V Singh  A Krishan 《Cytometry》1991,12(4):336-342
We have used an enzymatic (spectro-photometric) and a flow cytometric (GSH-MBCL) method to compare the glutathione (GSH) content of doxorubicin sensitive (P388) and resistant (P388/R-84) murine leukemic and human lung cancer cells. The flow cytometric analysis revealed that GSH-MBCL conjugate formation was dependent on glutathione-S-transferase (GST) activity. The human solid tumor cell lines exhibited extensive heterogeneity, high GSH content, and GST activity. In contrast to the enzymatic method, the flow cytometric method did not accurately reflect the 95% reduction in GSH content of cells treated for 24 h with 100 microM BSO. Possible reaction of MBCL with other sulfhydryl groups (other than GSH) in BSO-treated cells may be responsible for this discordance. We have also shown the feasibility of using dual parameter flow cytometry to monitor cellular anthracycline (daunorubicin) retention and GSH-MBCL conjugate fluorescence in human tumor cells. These two parameters, which measure drug retention and cellular detoxification, are believed to be the important determinants of chemoresistance in tumor cells.  相似文献   

12.
A new and useful method based on enzyme-assisted synthesis was developed for producing 3 alpha-O-beta-D-glucuronide conjugates from synthetic phase I metabolites of methyltestosterone and nandrolone. The formed glucuronide conjugates of 17 alpha-methyl-5 alpha-androstane-3 alpha,17 beta-diol (I), 17 alpha-methyl-5 beta-androstane-3 alpha,17 beta-diol (II), 5 alpha-estran-3 alpha-ol-17-one (III), and 5 beta-estran-3 alpha-ol-17-one (IV) are urinary metabolites, indicating the human misuse of the above-mentioned anabolic androgenic steroids (AAS). The common lack of reference material precludes the use and validation of these biomarkers in human doping control. Liver microsomes from Aroclor 1254-induced rats were used as a highly active source of mammalian UDP-glucuronosyltransferases (UGT, EC 2.4.1.17). After purification by protein precipitation, liquid-liquid extraction (dichloromethane), C-18 solid-phase extraction, and lyophilization, the steroid glucuronide structures were characterized by (1)H and (13)C NMR spectroscopy and tandem mass spectrometry. The enzymatic method was highly stereoselective, producing a single major conjugate from the parent steroids I-IV. The stereochemically pure steroid glucuronide conjugates were recovered in milligram amounts (1.0-2.8 mg, yield 12-29%), which is sufficient for veterinary and human doping control analyses; for pharmaco-, toxico-, and enzyme kinetic studies in the pharmaceutical industry; for clinical laboratories; and for forensic medicine. A new sensitive LC-MS method was developed for controlling the product purity in syntheses, as well as for enzyme kinetic characterization of AAS-metabolizing UGT activities in rat liver toward the aglycones I-IV. In this study, the UGT enzymes responsible for the formation of 3 alpha-O-linked glucuronides from the substrates I, II, III, and IV exhibited the specific enzyme activity values: 25, 124, 48, and 212 nmol/mg microsomal protein in a 2-h incubation, respectively.  相似文献   

13.
Bioactivation of xenobiotics by formation of toxic glutathione conjugates   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Evidence has been accumulating that several classes of compounds are converted by glutathione conjugate formation to toxic metabolites. The aim of this review is to summarize the current knowledge on the biosynthesis and toxicity of glutathione S-conjugates derived from halogenated alkanes, halogenated alkenes, and hydroquinones and quinones. Different types of toxic glutathione conjugates have been identified and will be discussed in detail: (i) conjugates which are transformed to electrophilic sulfur mustards, (ii) conjugates which are converted to toxic metabolites in an enzyme-catalyzed multistep mechanism, (iii) conjugates which serve as a transport form for toxic quinones and (iv) reversible glutathione conjugate formation and release of the toxic agent in cell types with lower glutathione concentrations. The kidney is the main, with some compounds the exclusive, target organ for compounds metabolized by pathways (i) to (iii). Selective toxicity to the kidney is easily explained due to the capability of the kidney to accumulate intermediates formed by processing of S-conjugates and to bioactivate these intermediates to toxic metabolites. The influences of other factors participating in the renal susceptibility are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Research on the effects of polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) toxicity tends to focus on commercial PCB congeners and parent PCBs themselves. However, studies have suggested that PCB metabolites may be more interesting than the parent compounds because of their high reactivity. As a key metabolic enzyme, glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) are responsible for detoxification by catalyzing the conjugation reaction of glutathione (GSH) to xenobiotics. Inhibition of GST activity indicates reduced detoxification ability. We investigated the inhibition of chicken liver GSTs by parent PCBs and their metabolites and observed dose-dependent inhibition in vitro; inhibitory efficiency declined in the order GSH-conjugate > mono-hydroxyl ≈ quinone ≈ hydroquinone > parent PCB. Structure-inhibitory activity relationship studies indicated that with the inhibitory activity greatly increases with the number of GSH moieties or chlorine substituents on the quinone ring. However, no significant linear relationship was observed for chlorine pattern changes on the phenyl ring. The reversibility of PCB metabolite inhibition of GSTs is discussed. PCB mono-hydroxyl, hydroquinone and quinone forms showed irreversible inhibition of GSTs, which suggests a mechanism involving covalent binding to cysteine residues in the GST active site. PCB glutathionyl conjugates showed reversible GST inhibition, implying non-covalent binding. Furthermore, reactive oxygen species did not significantly affect GST activity.  相似文献   

15.
The elimination and metabolism of [14-C]-tetrachloroethylene (Tetra) was studied in female rats and mice after the oral administration of 800 mg/kg [14-C]-Tetra. Elimination of unchanged Tetra was the main pathway of elimination in both species and amounted to 91.2% of the dose in rats and 85.1% in mice. [14-C]-Carbon dioxide (CO2) was found to be a trace metabolite of [14-C]-Tetra. Only a small part of the applied dose was transformed to urinary (rats = 2.3%, mice = 7.1%) and fecal (rats = 2.0%, mice = 0.5%) metabolites. The urinary metabolites were separated and quantified by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and identified by gas liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS). The following metabolites could be identified: oxalic acid (8.0% of urinary radioactivity in rats, 2.9% in mice), dichloroacetic acid (5.1%, 4.4%), trichloroacetic acid (54.0%, 57.8%), N-trichloroacetyl-aminoethanol (5.4%, 5.7%), trichloroethanol, free and conjugated (8.7%, 8.0%), S-1,2,2-trichlorovinyl-N-acetylcysteine (N-acetyl TCVC) (1.6%, 0.5%), and another conjugate of trichloroacetic acid (1.8%, 1.3%). The structures of the identified metabolites indicate two different pathways operative in Tetra biotransformation: cytochrome P-450-mediated epoxidation forming reactive metabolites in the liver and conjugation of Tetra with glutathione (GSH) catalyzed by glutathione transferase(s). The formation of reactive intermediates by renal processing of the glutathione conjugates may provide a molecular mechanism for the nephrotoxicity and nephrocarcinogenicity of Tetra in male rats.  相似文献   

16.
The reactivity of the episulfonium ion derived from S-(2-chloroethyl)glutathione (CEG), the glutathione conjugate of 1,2-dichloroethane, with the catalytic sites of protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) was investigated. The two cysteine residues of the two active sites of PDI are expected to be the major targets of alkylation. PDI was incubated with equimolar to 100-fold excess CEG. The activity of PDI was irreversibly inhibited with a concurrent loss of two thiols; however, PDI oxidative refolding activity was not completely inhibited. With mass spectrometry, sequencing PDI identified one alkylation event on each of the N-terminal cysteine residues in the two active site peptides. PDI appears robust and able to maintain some activity by steric constraint. We have established that the episulfonium ion of CEG can adduct PDI and may have important toxicologic significance for 1,2-dichloroethane toxicity.  相似文献   

17.
Multidrug resistance proteins (MRPs) are ATP-dependent export pumps that mediate the export of organic anions. ABCC1 (MRP1), ABCC2 (MRP2) and ABCC3 (MRP3) are all able to facilitate the efflux of anionic conjugates including glutathione (GSH), glucuronide and sulfate conjugates of xenobiotics and endogenous molecules. Earlier studies showed that ABCC4 functions as an ATP-driven export pump for cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP, as well as estradiol-17-beta-D-glucuronide. However, it was unclear if other conjugated metabolites can be transported by ABCC4. Hence in this study, a fluorescent substrate, bimane-glutathione (bimane-GS) was used to further examine the transport activity of ABCC4. Using cells stably overexpressing ABCC4, this study shows that ABCC4 can facilitate the efflux of the glutathione conjugate, bimane-glutathione. Bimane-glutathione efflux increased with time and >85% of the conjugate was exported after 15min. This transport was abolished in the presence of 2.5microM carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrasone (CCCP), an uncoupler of oxidative phosphorylation. Inhibition was also observed with known inhibitors of MRP transporters including benzbromarone, verapamil and indomethacin. In addition, 100microM methotrexate, an ABCC4 substrate or 100microM 6-thioguanine (6-TG), a compound whose monophosphate metabolite is an ABCC4 substrate, reduced efflux by >40%. A concentration-dependent inhibition of bimane-glutathione efflux was observed with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB) which is metabolized intracellularly to the glutathione conjugate, 2,4-dinitrophenyl-glutathione (DNP-GS). The determination that ABCC4 can mediate the transport of glucuronide and glutathione conjugates indicates that ABCC4 may play a role in the cellular extrusion of Phase II detoxification metabolites.  相似文献   

18.
Sulfhydryl groups, glutathione peroxidase (GPx) and glutathione-S-transferase (GST) are important elements of the antioxidant defence in the organism. The efficacy of their antioxidant action is influenced by many factors. In this work, the effect of fasting on total, protein-bound and nonprotein sulfhydryl groups and on the activity of liver and serum GPx and GST in rats were determined. Male Wistar rats were divided into two groups: non-fasted and 18-hour fasted. In fasted animals liver content of nonprotein sulfhydryl groups (represented predominantly by reduced glutathione; GSH) was diminished by 22% in comparison to non-fasted group, whereas total and protein-bound -SH groups were unaffected. The activity of liver and serum GPx was unchanged in food deprived rats. In these animals the activity of GST in serum was reduced by 26%. Fasting had no significant effect on the activity of GST in the liver. Our results demonstrate that in rats deprived of food for 18 hours liver and serum GPx and GST are not involved in protection against action of reactive oxygen species formed during fasting. The observed drop in the content of liver nonprotein sulfhydryl groups without concomitant rise in the activity of GPx and GST indicates that this effect may be due to augmented degradation of GSH, its potentiated efflux from hepatocytes and formation of conjugates with intermediates arising as a result of reactive oxygen species action.  相似文献   

19.
Glutathione S-transferase (GST) and multidrug resistance-associated proteins (MRPs) play major roles in drug resistance in melanoma. In this study, we investigated caffeic acid phenethyl ester (CAPE) as a selective GST inhibitor in the presence of tyrosinase, which is abundant in melanoma cells. Tyrosinase bioactivates CAPE to an o-quinone, which reacts with glutathione to form CAPE-SG conjugate. Our findings indicate that 90% CAPE was metabolized by tyrosinase after a 60-min incubation. LC–MS/MS analyses identified a CAPE-SG conjugate as a major metabolite. In the presence of tyrosinase, CAPE (10–25 μM) showed 70–84% GST inhibition; whereas in the absence of tyrosinase, CAPE did not inhibit GST. CAPE-SG conjugate and CAPE-quinone (25 μM) demonstrated ?85% GST inhibition via reversible and irreversible mechanisms, respectively. Comparing with CDNB and GSH, the non-substrate CAPE acted as a weak, reversible GST inhibitor at concentrations >50 μM. Furthermore, MK-571, a selective MRP inhibitor, and probenecid, a non-selective MRP inhibitor, decrease the IC50 of CAPE (15 μM) by 13% and 21%, apoptotic cell death by 3% and 13%, and mitochondrial membrane potential in human SK-MEL-28 melanoma cells by 10% and 56%, respectively. Moreover, computational docking analyses suggest that CAPE binds to the GST catalytic active site. Caffeic acid, a hydrolyzed product of CAPE, showed a similar GST inhibition in the presence of tyrosinase. Although, as controls, 4-hydroxyanisole and l-tyrosine were metabolized by tyrosinase to form quinones and glutathione conjugates, they exhibited no GST inhibition in the absence and presence of tyrosinase. In conclusion, both CAPE and caffeic acid selectively inhibited GST in the presence of tyrosinase. Our results suggest that intracellularly formed quinones and glutathione conjugates of caffeic acid and CAPE may play major roles in the selective inhibition of GST in SK-MEL-28 melanoma cells. Moreover, the inhibition of MRP enhances CAPE-induced toxicity in the SK-MEL-28 melanoma cells.  相似文献   

20.
In the present study, the enzymatic conjugation of the isoprene monoepoxides 3,4 epoxy-3-methyl-1-butene (EPOX-I) and 3,4-epoxy-2-methyl-1-butene (EPOX-II) with glutathione was investigated, using purified glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) of the alpha, mu, pi and theta-class of rat and man. HPLC analysis of incubations of EPOX-I and EPOX-II with [35S]glutathione (GSH) showed the formation of two radioactive fractions for each isoprene monoepoxide. The structures of the EPOX-I and EPOX-II GSH conjugates were elucidated with 1H-NMR analysis. As expected, two sites of conjugation were found for both isoprene epoxides. EPOX-II was conjugated more efficiently than EPOX-I. In addition, the mu and theta class glutathione S-transferases were much more efficient than the alpha and pi class glutathione S-transferases, both for rat and man. Because the mu- and theta-class glutathione S-transferases are expressed in about 50 and 40-90% of the human population, respectively, this may have significant consequences for the detoxification of isoprene monoepoxides in individuals who lack these enzymes. Rat glutathione S-transferases were more efficient than human glu tathione S-transferases: rat GST T1-1 showed about 2.1-6.5-fold higher activities than human GST T1-1 for the conjugation of both EPOX-I and EPOX-II, while rat GST M1-1 and GST M2-2 showed about 5.2-14-fold higher activities than human GST M1a-1a. Most of the glutathione S-transferases showed first order kinetics at the concentration range used (50-2000 microM). In addition to differences in activities between GST-classes, differences between sites of conjugation were found. EPOX-I was almost exclusively conjugated with glutathione at the C4-position by all glutathione S-transferases, with exception of rat GST M1-1, which also showed significant conjugation at the C3-position. This selectivity was not observed for the conjugation of EPOX-II. Incubations with EPOX-I and EPOX-II and hepatic S9 fractions of mouse, rat and man, showed similar rates of GSH conjugation for mouse and rat. Compared to mouse and rat, human liver S9 showed a 25-50-fold lower rate of GSH conjugation.  相似文献   

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