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1.
The ability of neurons to detoxify exogenously applied peroxides was analyzed using neuron-rich primary cultures derived from embryonic rat brain. Incubation of neurons with H2O2 at an initial concentration of 100 microM (300 nmol/3 ml) led to a decrease in the concentration of the peroxide, which depended strongly on the seeding density of the neurons. When 3 x 10(6) viable cells were seeded per dish, the half-time for the clearance by neurons of H2O2 from the incubation buffer was 15.1 min. Immediately after application of 100 microM H2O2 to neurons, glutathione was quickly oxidized. After incubation for 2.5 min, GSSG accounted for 48% of the total glutathione. Subsequent removal of H2O2 caused an almost complete regeneration of the original ratio of GSH to GSSG within 2.5 min. Compared with confluent astroglial cultures, neuron-rich cultures cleared H2O2 more slowly from the incubation buffer. However, if the differences in protein content were taken into consideration, the ability of the cells to dispose of H2O2 was identical in the two culture types. The clearance rate by neurons for H2O2 was strongly reduced in the presence of the catalase inhibitor 3-aminotriazol, a situation contrasting with that in astroglial cultures. This indicates that for the rapid clearance of H2O2 by neurons, both glutathione peroxidase and catalase are essential and that the glutathione system cannot functionally compensate for the loss of the catalase reaction. In addition, the protein-normalized ability of neuronal cultures to detoxify exogenous cumene hydroperoxide, an alkyl hydroperoxide that is reduced exclusively via the glutathione system, was lower than that of astroglial cells by a factor of 3. These results demonstrate that the glutathione system of peroxide detoxification in neurons is less efficient than that of astroglial cells.  相似文献   

2.
Na-Ca exchange activity in bovine cardiac sarcolemmal vesicles was stimulated up to 10-fold by preincubating the vesicles with 1 microM FeSO4 plus 1 mM dithiothreitol (DTT) in a NaCl medium. The increase in activity was not reversed upon removing the Fe and DTT. Stimulation of exchange activity under these conditions was completely blocked by 0.1 mM EDTA or o-phenanthroline; this suggests that the production of reduced oxygen species (H2O2, O2-.,.OH) during Fecatalyzed DTT oxidation might be involved in stimulating exchange activity. In agreement with this hypothesis, the increase in exchange activity in the presence of Fe-DTT was inhibited 80% by anaerobiosis and 60% by catalase. H2O2 (0.1 mM) potentiated the stimulation of Na-Ca exchange by Fe-DTT under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions; H2O2 also produced an increase in activity in the presence of either FeSO4 (1 microM) or DTT (1 mM), but it had no effect on activity by itself. Superoxide dismutase did not block the effects of Fe-DTT on exchange activity; however, the generation of O2-. by xanthine oxidase in the presence of an oxidizable substrate stimulated activity more than 2-fold. Hydroxyl radical scavenging agents (mannitol, sodium formate, sodium benzoate) did not attenuate the stimulation of activity observed with Fe-H2O2. Exchange activity was also stimulated by the simultaneous presence of glutathione (GSH; 1-2 mM) and glutathione disulfide (GSSG; 1-2 mM). Neither GSH nor GSSG was effective by itself and either 0.1 mM EDTA or o-phenanthroline blocked the effects on transport activity of the combination of GSH + GSSG. Treatment of the GSH and GSSG solutions with Chelex ion-exchange resin to remove contaminating transition metal ions reduced (by 40%) the degree of stimulation observed with GSH + GSSG. Full stimulating activity was restored to the Chelex-treated GSH and GSSG solutions by the addition of 1 microM Fe2+; Cu2+ was less effective than Fe2+ whereas Co2+ and Mn2+ were without effect. In the presence of 1 microM Fe2+, GSH alone produced a slight increase in transport activity, but this was markedly enhanced by the addition of Chelex-treated GSSG. The results indicate that stimulation of exchange activity requires the presence of both a reducing agent (DTT, GSH, O-.2, or Fe2+) and an oxidizing agent (H2O2, GSSG, and perhaps O2) and that the effects of these agents are mediated by metal ions (e.g. Fe2+).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
1. Metabolism of added hydroperoxides was studied in hemoglobin-free perfused rat liver and in isolated rat hepatocytes as well as microsomal and mitochondrial fractions. 2. Perfused liver is capable of removing organic hydroperoxides [cumene and tert-butyl hydroperoxide] at rates up to 3--4 mumol X min-1 X gram liver-1. Concomitantly, there is a release of glutathione disulfide (GSSG) into the extracellular space in a relationship approx. linear with hydroperoxide infusion rates. About 30 nmol GSSG are released per mumol hydroperoxide added per min per gram liver. GSSG release is interpreted to indicate GSH peroxidase activity. 3. GSSG release is observed also with added H2O2. At rates of H2O2 infusion of about 1.5 mumol X min-1 X gram liver-1 a maximum of GSSG release is attained which, however, can be increased by inhibition of catalase with 3-amino-1,2,4-aminotriazole. 4. A contribution of the endoplasmic reticulum in addition to glutathione peroxidase in organic hydroperoxide removal is demonstrated (a) by comparison of perfused livers from untreated and phenobarbital-pretreated rats and (b) in isolated microsomal fractions, and a possible involvement of reactive iron species (e.g. cytochrome P-450-linked peroxidase activity) is discussed. 5. Hydroperoxide addition to microsomes leads to rapid and substantial lipid peroxidation as evidenced by formation of thiobarbituric-acid-reactive material (presumably malondialdehyde) and by O2 uptake. Like in other types of induction of lipid peroxidation, malondialdehyde/O2 ratios of 1/20 are observed. Cumene hydroperoxide (0.6 mM) gives rise to 4-fold higher rates of malondialdehyde formation than tert-butyl hydroperoxide (1 mM). Ethylenediamine tetraacetate does not inhibit this type of lipid peroxidation. 6. Lipid peroxidation in isolated hepatocytes upon hydroperoxide addition is much lower than in isolated microsomes or mitochondria, consistent with the presence of effective hydroperoxide-reducing systems. However, when NADPH is oxidized to the maximal extent as evidenced by dual-wavelength spectrophotometry, lipid peroxidation occurs at large amounts. 7. A dependence of hydroperoxide removal rates upon flux through the pentose phosphate pathway is suggested by a stimulatory effect of glucose in hepatocytes from fasted rats and by an increased rate of 14CO2 release from [1-14C]glucose during hydroperoxide metabolism in perfused liver.  相似文献   

4.
To investigate the effects of dopamine (DA) on the release of glutathione (GSH) from astrocytes, we used astroglia-rich primary cultures from the brains of newborn rats. In the absence of DA, GSH accumulated in the medium of these cultures with a constant rate. In contrast, during incubation of the cells with 50 micro m DA extracellular GSH was not detectable anymore. This disappearance of extracellular GSH was prevented by superoxide dismutase, indicating that DA does not affect GSH release but rather reacts with the released GSH in a superoxide-dependent reaction. Incubation of astroglial cultures with 0.5 and 1 mm DA established almost constant extracellular concentrations of H2O2 of 5 microm and 15 microm, respectively. Under these conditions astroglial cultures release glutathione disulphide (GSSG). This GSSG export was blocked by catalase and by MK571, an inhibitor of the multidrug resistance protein 1. The effects of DA on the extracellular accumulations of GSH and GSSG were not modulated by inhibitors of DA receptors, DA transport, and monoamine oxidases. The other catecholamines adrenaline and noradrenaline showed similar effects on the accumulation of GSH and GSSG in the medium compared with those obtained for DA. In conclusion, the data presented demonstrate that DA affects astroglial GSH metabolism by two mechanisms: (i) directly by chemical reaction with extracellular GSH, and (ii) indirectly by generation of hydrogen peroxide that leads to the efflux of GSSG from astroglial cells. These observations are discussed in the context of the brain's GSH metabolism in Parkinson's disease.  相似文献   

5.
Vanadate V(V) markedly stimulated the oxidation of NADPH by GSSG reductase and this oxidation was accompanied by the consumption of O2 and the accumulation of H2O2. Superoxide dismutases completely eliminated this effect of V(V), whereas catalase was without effect, as was exogenous H2O2 added to 0.1 mM. These effects could be seen equally well in phosphate- or in 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)1-piperazineethanesulfonic acid-buffered solutions. Under anaerobic conditions there was no V(V)-stimulated oxidation of NADPH. Approximately 4% of the electrons flowing from NADPH to O2, through GSSG reductase, resulted in release of O2-. The average length of the free radical chains causing the oxidation of NADPH, initiated by O2- plus V(V), was calculated to be in the range 140-200 NADPH oxidized per O2- introduced. We conclude that GSSG reductase, and by extension other O2(-)-producing flavoprotein dehydrogenases such as lipoyl dehydrogenase and ferredoxin reductase, catalyze V(V)-stimulated oxidation of NAD(P)H because they release O2- and because O2- plus V(V) initiate a free radical chain oxidation of NAD(P)H. There is no reason to suppose that these enzymes can act as NAD(P)H:V(V) oxidoreductases.  相似文献   

6.
In the present study, we investigated the effect of naturally occurring and synthetic peroxides on K+-depolarization-evoked release of [3H]D-aspartate from bovine isolated retinae. Furthermore, effect of peroxides on endogenous glutamate concentrations were measured by HPLC in bovine neural retinae and vitreous humor of eyes treated with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) ex vivo. Both naturally occurring H2O2 (1-100 microM) and synthetic (cumene hydroperoxide, cuOOH; 1-100 microM) peroxides caused a concentration-dependent inhibition of K+-evoked [3H]D-aspartate release without affecting basal tritium efflux. The antioxidant, trolox (2 mM) prevented the inhibition of evoked [3H]D-aspartate overflow elicited by both H2O2 (30 microM) and cuOOH (10 microM). Inhibition of catalase by 3-amino-triazole (3- AT 100 mM) enhanced an inhibitory effect of a low concentration of H2O2 (1 microM) but antagonized the effect of H2O2 (30 microM) on K+-induced [3H]D-aspartate release. In ex vivo experiments, exogenously applied H2O2 (1-100 microM) also caused a concentration-related decrease in glutamate levels in the bovine retina. We conclude that peroxides can inhibit K+-evoked release of [3H]D-aspartate and also decrease endogenous glutamate concentrations in the bovine retina.  相似文献   

7.
Li X  May JM 《Mitochondrion》2002,1(5):447-453
Mitochondria generate potentially damaging amounts of superoxide and H2O2 during oxidative metabolism. Although many assays are available to measure mitochondrial H2O2 generation, most detect H2O2 that has escaped the organelle. To measure H2O2 within mitochondria that contain catalase, we have developed an assay based on the ability of H2O2 to inhibit catalase in the presence of 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole. The assay is simple to perform, does not require expensive instrumentation, and is specific for H2O2. Results from this assay show that H2O2 generation in rat heart mitochondria reflects the activity of the electron transport chain. Further, liver mitochondria prepared from selenium-deficient rats have increased succinate-stimulated rates of H2O2 generation. This indicates that mitochondrial selenoenzymes are important for H2O2 removal. It also demonstrates the utility of this assay in measuring H2O2 release from mitochondria that do not contain catalase. The assay should be useful for study of both superoxide-dependent H2O2 generation in situ, and the role of endogenous mitochondrial catalase in H2O2 removal.  相似文献   

8.
1. In the lung and liver of tocopherol-deficient rats, the activities of glutathione peroxidase and glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase were increased substantially, suggesting an important role for both enzymes in protecting the organ against the deleterious effects of lipid peroxides. 2. Facilitation of the glutathione peroxidase reaction by infusing t-butyl hydroperoxide caused the oxidation of nicotinamide nucleotides and glutathione, resulting in a concomitant increase in the rate of release of oxidized glutathione into the perfusate. Thus the rate of production of lipid peroxide and H2O2 in the perfused organ could be compared by simultaneous measurement of the rate of glutathione release and the turnover number of the catalase reaction. 3. On hyperbaric oxygenation at 4 X 10(5)Pa, H2O2 production, estimated from the turnover of the catalase reaction, was increased slightly in the liver, and glutathione release was increased slightly, in both lung and liver. 4. Tocopherol deficiency caused a marked increase in lipid-peroxide formation as indicated by a corresponding increase in glutathione release under hyperbaric oxygenation, with a further enhancement when the tocopherol-deficient rats were also starved. 5. The study demonstrates that the primary response to hyperbaric oxygenation is an elevation of the rate of lipid peroxidation rather than of the rate of formation of H2O2 or superoxide.  相似文献   

9.
The role of H(2)O(2) and protein thiol oxidation in oxidative stress-induced epithelial paracellular permeability was investigated in Caco-2 cell monolayers. Treatment with a H(2)O(2) generating system (xanthine oxidase + xanthine) or H(2)O(2) (20 microM) increased the paracellular permeability. Xanthine oxidase-induced permeability was potentiated by superoxide dismutase and prevented by catalase. H(2)O(2)-induced permeability was prevented by ferrous sulfate and potentiated by deferoxamine and 1,10-phenanthroline. GSH, N-acetyl-L-cysteine, dithiothreitol, mercaptosuccinate, and diethylmaleate inhibited H(2)O(2)-induced permeability, but it was potentiated by 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea. H(2)O(2) reduced cellular GSH and protein thiols and increased GSSG. H(2)O(2)-mediated reduction of GSH-to-GSSG ratio was prevented by ferrous sulfate, GSH, N-acetyl-L-cysteine, diethylmaleate, and mercaptosuccinate and potentiated by 1,10-phenanthroline and 1, 3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea. Incubation of soluble fraction of cells with GSSG reduced protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTPase) activity, which was prevented by coincubation with GSH. PTPase activity was also lower in H(2)O(2)-treated cells. This study indicates that H(2)O(2), but not O(2)(-). or.OH, increases paracellular permeability of Caco-2 cell monolayer by a mechanism that involves oxidation of GSH and inhibition of PTPases.  相似文献   

10.
Preexposure to hypoxia increased survival and lung reduced glutathione-to-oxidized glutathione ratios (GSH/GSSG) and decreased pleural effusions in rats subsequently exposed to continuous hyperoxia. In addition, lungs from hypoxia-preexposed rats developed less acute edematous injury (decreased lung weight gains and lung lavage albumin concentrations) than lungs from normoxia-preexposed rats when isolated and perfused with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) generated by xanthine oxidase (XO) or glucose oxidase (GO). In contrast, when perfused with elastase or exposed to a hydrostatic left atrial pressure challenge, lungs isolated from hypoxia-preexposed rats developed the same acute edematous injury as lungs from normoxia-preexposed rats. The mechanism by which hypoxia preexposure conferred protection against H2O2 appeared to depend on hexose monophosphate shunt (HMPS)-dependent increases in lung glutathione redox cycle activity. First, before perfusion with GO, lungs from hypoxia-preexposed rats had increased glutathione peroxidase and glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase (but not catalase or glutathione reductase) activities compared with lungs from normoxia-preexposed rats. Second, after perfusion with GO, lungs from hypoxia-preexposed rats had increased H2O2 reducing equivalents, as reflected by increased GSH/GSSG and NADPH/NADPH+, compared with lungs from normoxia-preexposed rats. Third, pretreatment of rats with an HMPS inhibitor, (6-aminonicotinamide) or a glutathione reductase inhibitor, [1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea] prevented hypoxia-conferred protection against H2O2-mediated acute edematous injury in isolated lungs. These findings suggest that increased detoxification of H2O2 by glutathione redox cycle and HMPS-dependent mechanisms contributes to tolerance to hyperoxia and resistance to H2O2 of lungs from hypoxia-preexposed rats.  相似文献   

11.
Menadione (MD) and H2O2 caused distinct effects on glutathione status in growing Escherichia coli. Treatment of E. coli AB1157 with 1-25 mM H2O2 did not result in an appreciable decrease in intracellular total glutathione (reduced glutathione [GSH] + oxidized glutathione [GSSG]). Only when cells were treated with 25 mM H2O2 an increase in GSSG and a decrease in the GSH:GSSG ratio were observed. In cells deficient in catalase HPI, such effect was observed even at 10 mM H2O2. The exposure of E. coli AB1157 to MD caused a dose-dependent decrease in intracellular total glutathione, an increase in GSSG, and a decrease in the ratio of GSH:GSSG. In E. coli deficient in cytosolic superoxide dismutase activity, a decrease in total glutathione after incubation with 0.2 mM MD was not accompanied by an increase in GSSGin, and the ratio of GSHin:GSSGin was three times higher than in the wild-type cells. The changes in the redox status of extracellular glutathione under the action of both oxidants were similar. Although the catalase activity increased several times after exposure to both oxidants, there were little or no changes in the activity of enzymes related to glutathione metabolism. A possible role of changes in redox status of glutathione under oxidative stress is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Energy-linked cardiac transport system for glutathione disulfide   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
T Ishikawa  M Zimmer  H Sies 《FEBS letters》1986,200(1):128-132
The relationship between the rate of glutathione disulfide (GSSG) export and the energy state was studied in isolated perfused rat heart. The intracellular GSSG level was maintained at saturation for transport (7.5 nmol GSSG X min-1 X g heart-1) by continuous perfusion with 20 microM t-butyl hydroperoxide. GSSG release was substantially restricted upon the addition of inhibitors of mitochondrial respiration such as KCN, antimycin A or rotenone. In contrast, no effect was observed on GSSG release during potassium-induced cardiac arrest, although changes in oxygen consumption and coronary flow were similar to those observed with KCN. The dependence of the GSSG transport rate on the cytosolic free ATP/ADP ratio reveals that GSSG transport is half-maximal at (ATP/ADP)free approximately equal to 10. The capacity of GSSG transport was unchanged by infusion of epinephrine, norepinephrine or dibutyryl cyclic AMP.  相似文献   

13.
Detection of catalase in rat heart mitochondria.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The presence of heme-containing catalase in rat heart mitochondria (20 +/- 5 units/mg) was demonstrated by biochemical and immunocytochemical analysis. Intact rat heart mitochondria efficiently consumed exogenously added H2O2. The rate of H2O2 consumption was not influenced by succinate, glutamate/malate, or N-ethylmaleimide but was significantly inhibited by cyanide. Hydrogen peroxide decomposition by mitochondria yielded molecular oxygen in a 2:1 stoichiometry, consistent with a catalytic mechanism. Mitochondrial fractionation studies and quantitative electron microscopic immunocytochemistry revealed that most catalase was matrix-associated. Electrophoretic analysis and Western blotting of the mitochondrial matrix fraction indicated the presence of a protein with similar electrophoretic mobility to bovine and rat liver catalase and immunoreactive to anti-catalase antibody. Myocardial tissue has a lower catalase-specific activity and a greater mitochondrial H2O2 production/g of tissue than most organs. Thus catalase, representing 0.025% of heart mitochondrial protein, is important for detoxifying mitochondrial derived H2O2 and represents a key antioxidant defense mechanism for myocardial tissue.  相似文献   

14.
The enhanced reduction of t-butyl hydroperoxide by glutathione peroxidase is accompanied by a decrease in the cellular concentration of both glutathione and NADPH in isolated liver cells, resulting in the release of GSSG (oxidized glutathione) from the perfused rat liver. This phenomenon, first reported by H. Sies, C. Gerstenecker, H. Menzel & L. Flohé (1972) (FEBS Lett. 27, 171-175), can be observed under a variety of conditions, not only with the acceleration of the glutathione peroxidase reaction by organic peroxides, but also during the oxidation of glycollate and benzylamine, during demethylation of aminopyrine in the liver of the phenobarbital-pretreated rat and during oxidation of uric acid in the liver of the starved rat pretreated with 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole. The rate of release of GSSG is altered markedly by changes in the metabolic conditions which affect the rate of hepatic NADPH generation. Thus, regardless of whether achieved by enhanced oxidation of glutathione by glutathione peroxidase or by oxidation of NADPH through other metabolic pathways, an increase in the cellular concentration of GSSG appears to facilitate its release. It has been found that, in addition to the hexose monophosphate shunt, the mitochondrial NADH-NADP+ transhydrogenase reaction plays an important role in supplying reducing equivalents to the glutathione peroxidase reaction and in maintaining the cellular oxidation-reduction state of the nicotinamide nucleotides. Spectrophotometric analysis of the steady-state concentration of the catalase-H2O2 intermediate with simultaneous measurement of the rate of release of GSSG leads to the conclusion that intracellular compartmentation of catalase in the peroxisomes and glutathione peroxidase in the cytosol and mitochondria distinguishes the reactivities of these enzymes one from the other, and facilitates their effective cooperation in hydroperoxide metabolism in the liver.  相似文献   

15.
Hyperoxia increases H2O2 production by brain in vivo   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Hyperoxia and hyperbaric hyperoxia increased the rate of cerebral hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) production in unanesthetized rats in vivo, as measured by the H2O2-mediated inactivation of endogenous catalase activity following injection of 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole. Brain catalase activity in rats breathing air (0.2 ATA O2) decreased to 75, 61, and 40% of controls due to endogenous H2O2 production at 30, 60, and 120 min, respectively, after intraperitoneal injection of 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole. The rate of catalase inactivation increased linearly in rats exposed to 0.6 ATA O2 (3 ATA air), 1.0 ATA O2 (normobaric 100% O2) and 3.0 ATA O2 (3 ATA 100% O2) compared with 0.2 ATA O2 (room air). Catalase inactivation was prevented by pretreatment of rats with ethanol (4 g/kg), a competitive substrate for the reactive catalase-H2O2 intermediate, compound I. This confirmed that catalase inactivation by 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole was due to formation of the catalase-H2O2 intermediate, compound I. The linear rate of catalase inactivation allows estimates of the average steady-state H2O2 concentration within brain peroxisomes to be calculated from the formula: [H2O2] = 6.6 pM + 5.6 ATA-1 X pM X [O2], where [O2] is the concentration of oxygen in ATA that the rats are breathing. Thus the H2O2 concentration in brains of rats exposed to room air is calculated to be about 7.7 pM, rises 60% when O2 tension is increased to 100% O2, and increases 300% at 3 ATA 100% O2, where symptoms of central nervous system toxicity first become apparent. These studies support the concept that H2O2 is an important mediator of O2-induced injury to the central nervous system.  相似文献   

16.
The aim of this study was to assess the effects of Ca2+ channel antagonist nimodipine (in concentration which competitive inhibited phosphodiesterase 1--PDE1) on oxidative stress alone or under inhibition of nitric oxide synthase by L-NAME in isolated rat heart. The hearts from male Wistar albino rats (n=18, BM about 200 g, age 8 weeks) were retrograde perfused according to the Langendorff technique at gradually increased constant perfusion pressure conditions (CPP, 40-120 cm H2O). The experiments were performed under control conditions, in the presence of Nimodipine (2 microM) or Nimodipine (2 microM) plus L-NAME (30 microM). Coronary flow (CF) varied in the autoregulatory range from 3.7 +/- 0.4 ml/min/g wt at 50 cm H2O to 4.35 +/- 0.79 at 90 cm H2O. Basal nitrite outflow, index of lipid peroxidation (measured as TBARS release) and superoxide anion release (O2-) (at 60 cm H2O) were 0.64 +/- 0.18 nmol/min/g wt, 0.55 +/- 0.13 micromol/min/g wt and 19.72 +/- 3.70 nmol/min/g wt, respectively. Nimodipine induced significant vasodilation at all values of CPP (from 26% at 40 cm H2O to 36% at 120 cm H2O) accompanied with significant decrease of nitrite outflow (from 59% at 40 cm H2O to 40% at 120 cm H2O), significant increase of TBARS above autoregulatory range (about 40%) and significant increase of O2- release (from 186% at 40 cm H2O to 117% at 120 cm H2O). However, perfusion with L-NAME completely reversed the effects of Nimodipine. Nimodipine-induced flow changes were decreased under L-NAME (from 3% at 40 cm H2O to 11% at 120 cm H2O) without changes in the autoregulatory range, accompanied with significantly increased nitrite outflow (from 69% at 40 cm H2O to 36% at 120 cm H2O) and TBARS release (almost 50%), as well as significantly decreased O2- release (from 50% at 40 cm H2O to 43% at 120 cm H20). Our findings show that effect of nimodipine on coronary flow should be significantly influenced by NO, TBARS and O2- release in isolated rat heart.  相似文献   

17.
The spectrophotometric determination of the catalase-H2O2 intermediate (Compound I) was extended to the liver in situ in anaesthetized rats. The rate of H2O2 production was determined for the liver in situ with endogenous substrates, and in the presence of excess of glycollate. Glycollate infusion doubled H2O2 production rate in the liver of air-breathing rats, and caused a fourfold increase when rats breathed O2 at 1 times 10(5) Pa. Hyperbaric O2 up to 6 times 10(5) Pa did not increase H2O2 generation supported by endogenous substrates, nor did it increase H2O2 production above that produced by 1 times 10(5) Pa O2 in glycollate-supplemented rats. The rates of ethanol oxidation via hepatic catalase and via alcohol dehydrogenase in the whole body were separately measured. The contribution of hepatic catalase to ethanol oxidation was found to be approx. 10 percent in endogenous conditions and increased to 30 percent or more of the total ethanol oxidation in rats supplemented with glycolate.  相似文献   

18.
Endogenous antioxidant defense systems are enhanced by various physiological stimuli including sublethal oxidative challenges, which induce tolerance to subsequent lethal oxidative injuries. We sought to evaluate the contributions of catalase and the glutathione system to the adaptive tolerance to H2O2. For this purpose, H9c2 cells were stimulated with 100 microM H2O2, which was the maximal dose at which no significant acute cell damage was observed. Twenty-four hours after stimulation, control and pretreated cells were challenged with a lethal concentration of H2O2 (300 microM). Compared with the control cells, pretreated cells were significantly tolerant of H2O2, with reduced cell lysis and improved survival rate. In pretreated cells, glutathione content increased to 48.20 +/- 6.38 nmol/mg protein versus 27.59 +/- 2.55 nmol/mg protein in control cells, and catalase activity also increased to 30.82 +/- 2.64 versus 15.46 +/- 1.29 units/mg protein in control cells, whereas glutathione peroxidase activity was not affected. Increased glutathione content was attributed to increased gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase activity, which is known as the rate-limiting enzyme of glutathione synthesis. To elucidate the relative contribution of the glutathione system and catalase to tolerance of H2O2, control and pretreated cells were incubated with specific inhibitors of gamma-glutamyl cysteine synthetase (L-buthionine sulfoximine) or catalase (3-amino-1,2,4-triazole), and challenged with H2O2. Cytoprotection by the low-dose H2O2 pretreatment was almost completely abolished by L-buthionine sulfoximine, while it was preserved after 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole treatment. From these results, it is concluded that both the glutathione system and catalase can be enhanced by H2O2 stimulation, but increased glutathione content rather than catalase activity was operative in the tolerance of lethal oxidative stress.  相似文献   

19.
The pH-dependence of the kinetic parameters in H2O2 decomposition by beef liver catalase was investigated. At pH 7.0, the ternary complex (ESS) decomposition rate was about 100 times faster than ESS formation (42 microM H2O2), and the value of the Michaelis constant was 0.025 M. From ethanol competition experiments, two different proton dissociation constants of the enzyme (pKe1 = 5.0, pKes2 = 5.9) were obtained for the binding of first and second H2O2 molecules. Another pKa value (pKes1) of 4.2 was obtained from the pH dependence of overall rate constant (ko). The reaction mechanism of catalase was discussed in relation to these ionizable groups.  相似文献   

20.
The compartmentation of hydrogen peroxide catabolism was studied in isolated hepatocytes. Hydrogen peroxide generation in the peroxisomal compartment was stimulated by addition of glycolate and in the endoplasmic reticular compartment (cytosolic compartment) by ethylmorphine. The rate of catabolism by catalase was estimated from the concentration of methanol required to decrease the steady-state concentration of catalase Compound I to the half-maximal value. The rate of catabolism by glutathione peroxidase was assessed in a semiquantitative manner by the rate of GSSG efflux. The relationship of GSSG efflux to catalase-dependent metabolism of H2O2 in the presence of increasing concentrations of glycolate was sigmoidal. This indicates that the function of glutathione peroxidase is small relative to that of catalase at low rates of H2O2 production in the peroxisomal fraction, but that the contribution of the former system increases as the peroxisomal H2O2 production rate is enhanced, and suggests that the accumulation of a steady-state concentration of H2O2 in the nanomolar range in the peroxisomes is sufficient to allow diffusion of H2O2 into the cytosol. Following pretreatment of animals with aminotriazole to inhibit catalase, glycolate caused GSSG release at rates nearly double those in control cells. This indicates that even incomplete inhibition of catalase in cells can result in enhanced release of H2O2 into the cytosol and demonstrates the relationship of GSSG release to H2O2 production under these conditions. An estimate of the rate of H2O2 diffusion to catalase during ethylmorphine metabolism was made from the steady-state level of Compound I and measured formate concentrations. This rate increased threefold as the rate of GSH loss increased from 1 to 2 nmol/106 cells per min, indicating that as the rate of H2O2 production in the endoplasmic reticulum becomes maximally stimulated in the presence of ethylmorphine, the rate of H2O2 metabolism by catalase becomes larger. A comparison of ethylmorphine-stimulated rates of GSSG efflux from cells of control and aminotriazole-treated rats shows that, unlike experiments with glycolate, no difference in the rate of efflux is observed. These results support the conclusion that in hepatocytes catalase has a relatively minor role in catabolism of H2O2 at low rates of H2O2 generation in the endoplasmic reticulum, but that the catalase function increases as the rate of H2O2 production is enhanced.  相似文献   

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