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1.
SH-reagents: tetraethylthiuram disulphide (TETD), 5,5'-dithiobisnitrobenzoic acid (DTNB), p-chloromercurybenzoate (p-ChMB), N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) were studied for their effect on the aldehyde dehydrogenase activity of mitochondrion (isoenzymes I and II) and microsome (isoenzyme II) fractions of the rat liver. TETD is established to inhibit isoenzyme I and isoenzyme II activity of mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase by 100 and 50%, respectively, and the microsomal enzyme activity by 20%. DTNB and NEM inhibit 30-50% of the activity in two isoforms of mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase having no effect on the enzymic activity in microsomes; p-ChMB inhibits completely the activity of the enzyme under study both in the mitochondrial and microsomal fractions. A conclusion is drawn that SH-groups are very essential for manifestation of the catalytic activity in the NAD+-dependent aldehyde dehydrogenase from mitochondrial and microsomal fractions.  相似文献   

2.
The subcellular distribution and properties of four aldehyde dehydrogenase isoenzymes (I-IV) identified in 2-acetylaminofluorene-induced rat hepatomas and three aldehyde dehydrogenases (I-III) identified in normal rat liver are compared. In normal liver, mitochondria (50%) and microsomal fraction (27%) possess the majority of the aldehyde dehydrogenase, with cytosol possessing little, if any, activity. Isoenzymes I-III can be identified in both fractions and differ from each other on the basis of substrate and coenzyme specificity, substrate K(m), inhibition by disulfiram and anti-(hepatoma aldehyde dehydrogenase) sera, and/or isoelectric point. Hepatomas possess considerable cytosolic aldehyde dehydrogenase (20%), in addition to mitochondrial (23%) and microsomal (35%) activity. Although isoenzymes I-III are present in tumour mitochondrial and microsomal fractions, little isoenzyme I or II is found in cytosol. Of hepatoma cytosolic aldehyde dehydrogenase activity, 50% is a hepatoma-specific isoenzyme (IV), differing in several properties from isoenzymes I-III; the remainder of the tumour cytosolic activity is due to isoenzyme III (48%). The data indicate that the tumour-specific aldehyde dehydrogenase phenotype is explainable by qualitative and quantitative changes involving primarily cytosolic and microsomal aldehyde dehydrogenase. The qualitative change requires the derepression of a gene for an aldehyde dehydrogenase expressed in normal liver only after exposure to potentially harmful xenobiotics. The quantitative change involves both an increase in activity and a change in subcellular location of a basal normal-liver aldehyde dehydrogenase isoenzyme.  相似文献   

3.
1. The properties and distribution of the NAD-linked unspecific aldehyde dehydrogenase activity (aldehyde: NAD+ oxidoreductase EC 1.2.1.3) has been studied in isolated cytoplasmic, mitochondrial and microsomal fractions of rat liver. The various types of aldehyde dehydrogenase were separated by ion exchange chromatography and isoelectric focusing. 2. The cytoplasmic fraction contained 10-15, the mitochondrial fraction 45-50 and the microsomal fraction 35-40% of the total aldehyde dehydrogenase activity, when assayed with 6.0 mM propionaldehyde as substrate. 3. The cytoplasmic fraction contained two separable unspecific aldehyde dehydrogenases, one with high Km for aldehydes (in the millimolar range) and the other with low Km for aldehydes (in the micromolar range). The latter can, however, be due to leakage from mitochondria. The high-Km enzyme fraction contained also all D-glucuronolactone dehydrogenase activity of the cytoplasmic fraction. The specific formaldehyde and betaine aldehyde dehydrogenases present in the cytoplasmic fraction could be separated from the unspecific activities. 4. In the mitochondrial fraction there was one enzyme with a low Km for aldehydes and another with high Km for aldehydes, which was different from the cytoplasmic enzyme. 5. The microsomal aldehyde dehydrogenase had a high Km for aldehydes and had similar properties as the mitochondrial high-Km enzyme. Both enzymes have very little activity with formaldehyde and glycolaldehyde in contrast to the other aldehyde dehydrogenases. They are apparently membranebound.  相似文献   

4.
From normal rat liver mitochondrial and microsomal fractions, 4 distinct aldehyde dehydrogenase isozymes with millimolar substrate Km values have been purified and characterized. Two isozymes were isolated from mitochondria and 2 from microsomes. A mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase with a substrate Km in the micromolar range was also identified. Subunit molecular weights for all millimolar Km isozymes is 54,000. The mitochondrial and microsomal millimolar Km isozymes are clearly distinguishable from each other by substrate and coenzyme specificity, pH velocity profiles, and thermal stability. By these same properties, the 2 isozymes from each organelle are virtually identical. The 2 mitochondrial isozymes can be distinguished by apparent molecular weight (I, 170,000; II, approximately 250,000), Km for NADP+, effect of inhibitors, and pI. The 2 microsomal isozymes are of the same apparent molecular weight (approximately 250,000), but are distinguishable by their Km values for benzaldehyde and NADP+, response to inhibitors, and pI.  相似文献   

5.
Imamura Y  Wu X  Noda A  Noda H 《Life sciences》2002,70(22):2687-2697
We examined the metabolism of N-desisopropylpropranolol (NDP), which is generated from propranolol (PL) by side-chain N-desisopropylation, to naphthoxylactic acid (NLA) in rat liver. S(-)-NDP (S-NDP) and R(+)-NDP (R-NDP) were enantioselectively metabolized to NLA in isolated rat hepatocytes and in an enzyme reaction system of rat liver mitochondria with cofactor NAD+. Furthermore, the clearance profiles of NDP enantiomers were examined in an enzyme reaction system of rat liver mitochondria without NAD+. The amounts of S-NDP remaining in the incubation medium were similar to those of R-NDP, suggesting that monoamine oxidase (MAO) catalyzes the deamination of NDP to the aldehyde intermediate, but fails to deaminate enantioselectively S-NDP or R-NDP. Cyanamide, a potent inhibitor of aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH), markedly decreased the formation of NLA from racemic NDP in the enzyme reaction system of rat liver mitochondria with NAD+. When rat liver cytosol and microsomes were added to this enzyme reaction system, no significant alterations were observed in the amount of NLA generated from racemic NDP. We concluded that MAO deaminates NDP to an aldehyde intermediate, and that mitochondrial ALDH subsequently catalyzes the enantioselective metabolism of the aldehyde intermediate to NLA in rat liver.  相似文献   

6.
Molybdenum hydroxylase activity in guinea pig liver has been compared with that of marker enzymes in mitochondria (succinate dehydrogenase), microsomes (glucose-6-phosphatase) and cytosol (lactate dehydrogenase). Aldehyde oxidase activity was highest in the cytosol, with about 10-fold activity of xanthine oxidase. Significant molybdenum hydroxylase activity was found in mitochondria with minimal levels in microsomes. Mitochondrial and cytosolic aldehyde oxidase varied in substrate specificity and electrophoretic mobility with two major bands in each fraction, one of which was common to cytosol and mitochondria.  相似文献   

7.
The metabolism of the lipid peroxidation product 4-hydroxynonenal and of several other related aldehydes by isolated hepatocytes and rat liver subcellular fractions has been investigated. Hepatocytes rapidly metabolize 4-hydroxynonenal in an oxygen-independent process with a maximum rate (depending on cell preparation) ranging from 130 to 230 nmol/min per 10(6) cells (average 193 +/- 50). The aldehyde is also rapidly utilized by whole rat liver homogenate and the cytosolic fraction (140 000 g supernatant) supplemented with NADH, whereas purified nuclei, mitochondria and microsomes supplemented with NADH show no noteworthy consumption of the aldehyde. In cytosol, the NADH-mediated metabolism of the aldehyde exhibits a 1:1 stoichiometry, i.e. 1 mol of NADH oxidized/mol of hydroxynonenal consumed, and the apparent Km value for the aldehyde is 0.1 mM. Addition of pyrazole (10 mM) or heat inactivation of the cytosol completely abolishes aldehyde metabolism. The various findings strongly suggest that hepatocytes and rat liver cytosol respectively convert 4-hydroxynonenal enzymically is the corresponding alcohol, non-2-ene-1,4-diol, according to the equation: CH3-[CH2]4-CH(OH)-CH = CH-CHO + NADH + H+----CH3-[CH2]4-CH(OH)-CH = CH-CH2OH + NAD+. The alcohol non-2-ene-1,4-diol has not yet been isolated from incubations with hepatocytes and liver cytosolic fractions, but was isolated in pure form from an incubation mixture containing 4-hydroxynonenal, isolated liver alcohol dehydrogenase and NADH and its chemical structure was confirmed by mass spectroscopy. Compared with liver, all other tissues possess only little ability to metabolize 4-hydroxynonenal, ranging from 0% (fat pads) to a maximal 10% (kidney) of the activity present in liver. The structure of the aldehyde has a strong influence on the rate and extent of its enzymic NADH-dependent reduction to the alcohol. The saturated analogue nonanal is a poor substrate and only a small proportion of it is converted to the alcohol. Similarly, nonenal is much less readily utilized as compared with 4-hydroxynonenal. The effective conversion of the cytotoxic 4-hydroxynonenal and other reactive aldehydes to alcohols, which are probably less toxic, could play a role in the general defence system of the liver against toxic products arising from radical-induced lipid peroxidation.  相似文献   

8.
A membrane-bound aldehyde dehydrogenase was solubilized from rat liver microsomes and purified about 150-fold by chromatography on ω-aminohexyl- and 5′-AMP-Sepharose columns with a recovery of about 40%. The purified enzyme was homogeneous upon sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and its monomeric molecular weight was estimated to be 51,000. In aqueous solution, it existed as large, polymeric aggregates. Its activity towards straight-chain aliphatic aldehydes increased as their carbon chain length was increased at least up to dodecanal, whereas aldehyde dehydrogenase in the cytosolic fraction of rat liver was most active with hexanal as substrate.  相似文献   

9.
Betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase has been purified to homogeneity from rat liver mitochondria. The properties of betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase were similar to those of human cytoplasmic E3 isozyme in substrate specificity and kinetic constants for substrates. The primary structure of four tryptic peptides was also similar; only two substitutions, at most, per peptide were observed. Thus, betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase is not a specific enzyme, as formerly believed; activity with betaine aldehyde is a property of aldehyde dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.3), which has broad substrate specificity. Up to the present time the enzyme was thought to be cytoplasmic in mammals. This report establishes, for the first time, mitochondrial subcellular localization for aldehyde dehydrogenase, which dehydrogenates betaine aldehyde, and its colocalization with choline dehydrogenase. Betaine aldehyde dehydrogenation is an important function in the metabolism of choline to betaine, a major osmolyte. Betaine is also important in mammalian organisms as a major methyl group donor and nitrogen source. This is the first purification and characterization of mitochondrial betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase from any mammalian species.  相似文献   

10.
Formaldehyde can be metabolized primarily by two different pathways, one involving oxidation by the low-Km mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase, the other involving a specific, glutathione-dependent, formaldehyde dehydrogenase. To estimate the roles played by each enzyme in formaldehyde metabolism by rat hepatocytes, experiments with acetaldehyde and cyanamide, a potent inhibitor of the low-Km aldehyde dehydrogenase were carried out. The glutathione-dependent oxidation of formaldehyde by 100,000g rat liver supernatant fractions was not affected by either acetaldehyde or by cyanamide. By contrast, the uptake of formaldehyde by intact mitochondria was inhibited 75 to 90% by cyanamide. Acetaldehyde inhibited the uptake of formaldehyde by mitochondria in a competitive fashion. Formaldehyde was a weak inhibitor of the oxidation of acetaldehyde by mitochondria, suggesting that, relative to formaldehyde, acetaldehyde was a preferred substrate. In isolated hepatocytes, cyanamide, which inhibited the oxidation of acetaldehyde by 75 to 90%, produced only 30 to 50% inhibition of formaldehyde uptake by cells as well as of the production of 14CO2 and of formate from [14C]formaldehyde. The extent of inhibition by cyanamide was the same as that produced by acetaldehyde (30-40%). In the presence of cyanamide, acetaldehyde was no longer inhibitory, suggesting that acetaldehyde and cyanamide may act at the same site(s) and inhibit the same formaldehyde-oxidizing enzyme system. These results suggest that, in rat hepatocytes, formaldehyde is oxidized by cyanamide- and acetaldehyde-sensitive (low-Km aldehyde dehydrogenase) and insensitive (formaldehyde dehydrogenase) reactions, and that both enzymes appear to contribute about equally toward the overall metabolism of formaldehyde.  相似文献   

11.
Crotonaldehyde was oxidized by disrupted rat liver mitochondrial fractions or by intact mitochondria at rates that were only 10 to 15% that of acetaldehyde. Although a poor substrate for oxidation, crotonaldehyde is an effective inhibitor of the oxidation of acetaldehyde by mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase, by intact mitochondria, and by isolated hepatocytes. Inhibition by crotonaldehyde was competitive with respect to acetaldehyde, and the Ki for crotonaldehyde was about 5 to 20 microM. Crotonaldehyde had no effect on the oxidation of glutamate or succinate. Very low levels of acetaldehyde were detected during the metabolism of ethanol. Crotonaldehyde increased the accumulation of acetaldehyde more than 10-fold, indicating that crotonaldehyde, besides inhibiting the oxidation of added acetaldehyde, also inhibited the oxidation of acetaldehyde generated by the metabolism of ethanol. Formaldehyde was a substrate for the low-Km mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase, as well as for a cytosolic, glutathione-dependent formaldehyde dehydrogenase. Crotonaldehyde was a potent inhibitor of mitochondrial oxidation of formaldehyde, but had no effect on the activity of formaldehyde dehydrogenase. In hepatocytes, crotonaldehyde produced about 30 to 40% inhibition of formaldehyde oxidation, which was similar to the inhibition produced by cyanamide. This suggested that part of the formaldehyde oxidation occurred via the mitochondrial aldehyde dehydrogenase, and part via formaldehyde dehydrogenase. The fact that inhibition by crotonaldehyde is competitive may be of value since other commonly used inhibitors of aldehyde dehydrogenase are irreversible inhibitors of the enzyme.  相似文献   

12.
Although the three-dimensional structure of the dimeric class 3 rat aldehyde dehydrogenase has recently been published (Liu ZJ et al., 1997, Nature Struct Biol 4:317-326), few mechanistic studies have been conducted on this isoenzyme. We have characterized the enzymatic properties of recombinant class 3 human stomach aldehyde dehydrogenase, which is very similar in amino acid sequence to the class 3 rat aldehyde dehydrogenase. We have determined that the rate-limiting step for the human class 3 isozyme is hydride transfer rather than deacylation as observed for the human liver class 2 mitochondrial enzyme. No enhancement of NADH fluorescence was observed upon binding to the class 3 enzyme, while fluorescence enhancement of NADH has been previously observed upon binding to the class 2 isoenzyme. It was also observed that binding of the NAD cofactor inhibited the esterase activity of the class 3 enzyme while activating the esterase activity of the class 2 enzyme. Site-directed mutagenesis of two conserved glutamic acid residues (209 and 333) to glutamine residues indicated that, unlike in the class 2 enzyme, Glu333 served as the general base in the catalytic reaction and E209Q had only marginal effects on enzyme activity, thus confirming the proposed mechanism (Hempel J et al., 1999, Adv Exp Med Biol 436:53-59). Together, these data suggest that even though the subunit structures and active site residues of the isozymes are similar, the enzymes have very distinct properties besides their oligomeric state (dimer vs. tetramer) and substrate specificity.  相似文献   

13.
Short-term intragastric administration of selected polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (100 mg/kg daily for 4 days) to male Wistar rats resulted in marked changes in liver cytosolic aldehyde dehydrogenase activity. Non-carcinogenic anthracene, phenanthrene and chrysene produced a 2.5–3-fold increase in the activity assayed with propionaldehyde as substrate and NAD as coenzyme. Weakly carcinogenic 1,2-benzanthracene enhanced aldehyde dehydrogenase activity 9-fold and the potent carcinogens 3,4-benzpyrene and 3-methylcholanthrene 30-fold. With benzaldehyde as substrate and NADP as coenzyme the differences between the groups were even more pronounced. Somewhat similar but less manifest effects on aldehyde dehydrogenase activity were detected also in the liver microsomes and in the postmitochondrial fractions of the small intestinal mucosa. On the basis of their ability to induce aldehyde dehydrogenase activity the compounds could be divided into three groups. This classification was found to correlate well with the carcinogenic potency of the compounds. It appeared that the exposure to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, especially the carcinogenic ones, was followed by synthesis of a new aldehyde dehydrogenase form. This new form was differentiated from the normally existing cytosolic aldehyde dehydrogenase by its ability to oxidize benzaldehyde in the presence of NADP.  相似文献   

14.
The pre- and post-natal ontogeny of Sprague-Dawley rat liver aldehyde dehydrogenase [aldehyde-NAD(P)(+) oxidoreductase, EC 1.2.1.5] is described. At no time in its ontogenetic development does normal liver aldehyde dehydrogenase exhibit any of the characteristics of a series of unique aldehyde dehydrogenases that can be isolated from 2-acetamidofluorene-induced rat hepatomas. Enzyme activity is first detectable in 15-day foetal liver and gradually increases throughout pre- and post-natal development until adult activities are attained by day 49 after birth. Electrophoretically, normal aldehyde dehydrogenase, throughout its ontogeny, exists as the same single isoenzyme found in normal adult liver. Isoelectric points for two normal liver isoenzymes demonstrable by isoelectric focusing are pH5.9 and 6.0. The immunochemical properties of aldehyde dehydrogenase during its ontogeny are identical with those of normal adult liver aldehyde dehydrogenase when tested against anti-(hepatoma aldehyde dehydrogenase) serum in Ouchterlony double-diffusion tests. The results indicate that the hepatoma-specific aldehyde dehydrogenases are not the result of the de-repression of genes normally repressed in adult rat liver or in some other adult tissue.  相似文献   

15.
A new assay procedure for measurement of rat liver mitochondrial choline dehydrogenase was developed. Oxidation of [methyl-14C]choline to [methyl-14C]betaine aldehyde and [methyl-14C]betaine was measured after isolating these compounds using HPLC. We observed that NAD+ was required for conversion of betaine aldehyde to betaine in rat liver mitochondria. In the absence of this cofactor, oxidation of choline led to the accumulation of betaine aldehyde. The apparent Km of the mitochondrial choline dehydrogenase for choline was 0.14-0.27 mM, which is significantly lower than previously reported. A partially purified preparation of choline dehydrogenase catalyzed betaine aldehyde formation only in the presence of exogenous electron acceptors (e.g., phenazine methosulfate). This preparation failed to catalyze the formation of betaine even in the presence of NAD+, indicating that betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase may be a separate enzyme from choline dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract: NAD-dependent aldehyde dehydrogenases (EC 1.2.1.3) were isolated from various subcellular organelles as well as from different regions of rat brain. The mitochondrial, microsomal, and cytosolic fractions were found to contain 40%, 28%, and 12%, respectively, of the total aldehyde dehydrogenase (5.28 ± 0.44 nmol NADH/min/g tissue) found in rat brain homogenate when assayed with 70 μ. M propionaldehyde at pH 7.5. The total activity increased to 17.3 ± 2.7 nmol NADH/min/g tissue when assayed with 5 m M propionaldehyde. Under these conditions the three organelles contained 49%, 23%, and 9%, respectively, of the activity. The enzyme isolated from cytosol possessed the lowest K m. The molecular weight of the enzyme isolated from all three subcellular organelles was ∼100,000. Four activity bands were found by electrophoresis of crude homogenates, isolated mitochondria, or microsomes on cellulose acetate strips. Cytosol possessed just two of the forms. The total activity was essentially the same in homogenates obtained from cortex, subcortex, pons-medulla, or cerebellum. Further, the enzyme had the same molecular distribution and total activity in each of these four brain regions. Disulfiram was found to be an in vivo and in vitro inhibitor of the enzymes obtained from these brain regions. Mercaptoethanol, required for the stability of the enzyme, reversed the inhibition produced by disulfiram. The effect was greater for enzyme isolated from cytosol than from mitochondria. Calculations led to the prediction that aldehydes such as acetaldehyde are oxidized in cytosol.  相似文献   

17.
A study was made of the effect of chronic administration of the hypolipidemic drug clofibrate on the activity and intracellular localization of rat liver aldehyde dehydrogenase. The enzyme was assayed using several aliphatic and aromatic aldehydes. Clofibrate treatment caused a 1.5 to 2.3-fold increase in the liver specific aldehyde dehydrogenase activity. The induced enzyme has a high Km for acetaldehyde and was found to be located in peroxisomes and microsomes. Clofibrate did not alter the enzyme activity in the cytoplasmic fraction. The total peroxisomal aldehyde dehydrogenase activity increased 3 to 4-fold under the action of clofibrate. Disruption of the purified peroxisomes by the hypotonic treatment or in the alkaline conditions resulted in the release of catalase from the broken organelles, while aldehyde dehydrogenase as well as nucleoid-bound urate oxidase and the peroxisomal membrane marker NADH:cytochrome c reductase remained in the peroxisomal 'ghosts'. At the same time, treatment by Triton X-100 led to solubilization of the membrane-bound NADH:cytochrome c reductase and aldehyde dehydrogenase from intact peroxisomes and their 'ghosts'. These results indicate that aldehyde dehydrogenase is located in the peroxisomal membrane. The peroxisomal aldehyde dehydrogenase is active with different aliphatic and aromatic aldehydes, except for formaldehyde and glyceraldehyde. The enzyme Km values lie in the millimolar range for acetaldehyde, propionaldehyde, benzaldehyde and phenylacetaldehyde and in the micromolar range for nonanal. Both NAD and NADP serve as coenzymes for the enzyme. Aldehyde dehydrogenase was inhibited by disulfiram, N-ethylmaleimide and 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic)acid. According to its basic kinetic properties peroxisomal aldehyde dehydrogenase seems to be similar to a clofibrate-induced microsomal enzyme. The functional role of both enzymes in the liver cells is discussed.  相似文献   

18.
The interactions of three groups of probes (berberine alkaloids, tricyclic psychopharmaca and acridine derivatives) with isoenzymes of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase and with rat liver alcohol dehydrogenase have been examined. These compounds inhibit the activity of the EE isoenzyme of horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase but differ in their behaviour towards the steroid-active enzymes (i.e. the ES isoenzyme of horse liver alcohol dehydrognase and alcohol dehydrogenase from rat liver): psychopharmaca inhibit, acridines activate and berberines do not bind. The ligands differ also in their influence on the modification of the EE isoenzyme by iodoacetate. Polarities (expressed as Kosower's Z values) of the respective binding sites on the EE isoenzyme were estimated from optical properties of bound probes. Berberines bind into a very hydrophobic area of the enzyme molecule, the binding site for psychopharmaca is moderately hydrophobic and that for acridines is rather polar. Steric arrangements of the binding sites are also discussed. The data presented confirm the existence of three distinct binding sites for these ligands in the substrate pocket of liver alcohol dehydrogenase.  相似文献   

19.
An NAD-linked aldehyde dehydrogenase which in addition to aliphatic and aromatic aldehydes, metabolizes aminoaldehydes and betaine aldehyde, has been purified to homogeneity from male Sprague-Dawley rat liver mitochondria. The properties of the rat mitochondrial enzyme are similar to those of a rat liver cytoplasmic betaine aldehyde dehydrognase and the human cytoplasmic E3 isozyme. The primary structure. of four tryptic peptides were also similar; only one difference in primary structure was observed. The close similarity of properties of the cytoplasmic with the mitochondrial form suggest that the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase may be coded for by the same nuclear gene. Investigation of the mitochondrial form by isoelectric focusing resulted in visualization of multiple forms, different from those seen in the cytoplasm suggesting that the enzyme may be processed in the mitochondria.  相似文献   

20.
In vitro inhibition of rat liver mitochondrial and microsomal aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) under conditions of active CCl4 metabolism was investigated. Incubation of microsomes or mitochondria in the presence of NADPH alone caused significant, time-dependent inhibition of mitochondrial and microsomal ALDH. EDTA partially protected ALDH from inhibition. Incubation of microsomes or microsomes plus mitochondria in the presence of NADPH and CCl4 resulted in marked inhibition of microsomal and mitochondrial ALDH activity. The inhibition was both dose- and time-dependent and was relatively less in the presence of EDTA. It is proposed that the inhibition of membrane-bound ALDH may be one of the early events responsible for the genesis of CCl4-hepatotoxicity.  相似文献   

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