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1.
Liver conservation for transplantation is usually made at 2-4 degrees C. We studied the effect of rewarming to 37 degrees C for up to 3 h of rat hepatocytes kept at 4 degrees C for 20 h, modulating intracellular glutathione (GSH) concentration either with a GSH precursor (N-acetyl-L-cysteine, NAC), or with GSH depleting agents (diethylmaleate and buthionine sulfoximine, DEM/BSO). Untreated hepatocytes showed time-dependent production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), lipid peroxidation, chromatin condensation and membrane blebbing, decrease in GSH concentration, and protein sulfhydryl groups. Fluorochromatization with Propidium Iodide (PI) and Annexin V (AnxV) of cells rewarmed for 1 h caused an increase of AnxV-positive cells without PI staining and any observed lactate dehydrogenase leakage. TUNEL and DNA-laddering tests were negative for all times and treatments, indicating that apoptosis may occur without DNA fragmentation. Cold preservation and rewarming in the presence of NAC induced a significant improvement in the morphology, less oxidative stress and apoptosis. Conversely, DEM/BSO caused a marked deterioration of morphology, increase of oxidative stress and apoptosis. These results suggested that marked changes in GSH status might play a critical role in triggering apoptosis during cold preservation of isolated rat hepatocytes. NAC, added before rewarming, might represent a therapeutic approach for preventing the early events of apoptosis during cold storage.  相似文献   

2.
The addition of glutathione (GSH) to University of Wisconsin (UW) solution increases the intracellular content of GSH and decreases the release of lactate dehydrogenase used here as a measure of cell viability. However, we found a depletion of GSH when the cells were transferred from UW solution to the rewarming solution. This could sensitize the cells to various forms of oxidative injury. In this study we examined how different compositions of rinsing and rewarming solutions affected the GSH content and the viability of hepatocytes after 72 h of cold storage. For both the rinsing and the rewarming steps we used a Krebs-Henseleit solution with the addition of GSH, methionine, or both GSH and methionine. We found no loss of GSH when the hepatocytes were rinsed in the presence of 3 mM GSH. During the rewarming step we observed a loss of GSH in all of the study groups, but the cells that were incubated with 1 mM methionine showed a lesser depletion of GSH and improved viability. This finding may have valuable applications in hepatocellular transplantation and in the development of bioartificial liver support devices.  相似文献   

3.
Depletion of glutathione after gamma irradiation modifies survival   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The relationship between the intracellular glutathione (GSH) concentration and the aerobic radiation response was studied in Chinese hamster ovary cells. Various degrees of GSH depletion were produced by exposure to buthionine sulfoximine (BSO) and/or diethyl maleate (DEM). Diethyl maleate did not act as a classical radiosensitizer under the experimental conditions employed, nor did exposure to DEM/BSO nonspecifically affect protein thiols as measured by thiol blotting. Dose-response curves were obtained using cells irradiated in the absence or presence of DEM/BSO, which decreased GSH levels by 90-95%. Exposure to DEM/BSO did not affect the formation of DNA single-strand breaks or DNA-protein crosslinks measured immediately after irradiation performed at ice temperatures. Analysis of survival curves indicated that the Dq was decreased by 18% when GSH depletion occurred prior to, during, and after irradiation. The DEM/BSO exposure did not affect D0. To study postirradiation conditions, cells were exposed to 10 microM DEM prior to and during irradiation, which was performed at ice temperatures. Levels of GSH were depleted by 75% by this protocol. Immediately after irradiation, the cells were rapidly warmed by the addition of 37 degrees C growth medium containing either 10 or 90 microM DEM. Addition of 10 microM DEM after irradiation did not affect the degree of depletion, which remained constant at 75%. In contrast, GSH depletion was increased to 90% 10 min after addition of the 90 microM DEM. Addition of 90 microM DEM after irradiation produced a statistically significant difference in survival compared to addition of 10 microM DEM. In a second depletion protocol, cells were exposed to 100 microM DEM at room temperature for 5 min, irradiated, incubated at 37 degrees C for 1 h, washed, and then incubated in 50 microM BSO for 24 h. This depletion protocol reduced survival by a factor of 2.6 compared to cells not exposed to the combination of DEM/BSO. Survival was not affected if the cells were exposed to the DEM or BSO alone. This was interpreted to indicate that survival was not affected by GSH depletion occurring after irradiation unless depletion was rapid and sustained. The rate of repair of sublethal and potentially lethal damage was measured and found to be independent of the DEM/BSO exposure. These experimental results in addition to previous ones (Freeman and Meredith, Int. J. Radiat. Oncol. Biol. Phys. 13, 1371-1375, 1987) were interpreted to indicate that under aerobic conditions GSH depletion may alter the expression of radiation damage by affecting metabolic fixation.  相似文献   

4.
Depletion of cellular GSH by diethyl maleate (DEM) potentiates CH2O toxicity in isolated rat hepatocytes and it was postulated that this increase in toxicity is due to the further decrease in GSH caused by CH2O in DEM-pretreated hepatocytes (1). The present investigation was conducted to investigate further the effects of CH2O, DEM, and acrolein (a compound which is structurally related to CH2O and DEM) on subcellular GSH pools and on protein sulfhydryl groups (PSH). CH2O caused a decrease in cytosolic GSH but had no effect on mitochondrial GSH either in previously untreated hepatocytes or in DEM-pretreated hepatocytes in which GSH was approximately 25% of control. DEM decreased both cytosolic and mitochondrial GSH but it did not produce toxicity. Neither CH2O (up to 7.5 mM) nor DEM (20 mM) decreased PSH. However, in cells pretreated with 1 mM DEM, CH2O (7.5 mM) decreased PSH and this effect preceded cell death. Acrolein decreased both cytosolic and mitochondrial GSH and it also decreased PSH significantly prior to causing cell death. CH2O and acrolein stimulated phosphorylase alpha activity, indicative of an increase in cytosolic free Ca2+, by a PSH-independent and PSH-dependent mechanism, respectively. These results suggest that the further depletion of cellular GSH by CH2O in DEM-pretreated cells is not due to the depletion of mitochondrial GSH. CH2O toxicity in DEM-pretreated cells is, however, correlated with depletion of PSH. The critical sulfhydryl protein(s) responsible for cell death remain to be more clearly defined.  相似文献   

5.
In this study, we used isolated rat hepatocytes to investigate the effect of nucleoside content of the preserved cells on the ability to synthesize glutathione (GSH) during the rewarming process. We cold-stored hepatocytes in University of Wisconsin (UW) solution (72 h, 0 degrees C, N(2)) without nucleosides and with the addition of 5 mM adenosine or 10 mM ATP. After 72 h of cold storage, we determined the GSH synthesis rate and the ATP content of the cells. We found a GSH synthesis rate similar to that of freshly isolated hepatocytes only in the group of cells cold-stored with 10 mM ATP. When we tested the cellular ATP concentrations, we found that controls and preserved cells with 10 mM ATP showed a similar value of ATP during the rewarming step. Our results suggested that the incorporation of ATP in the UW solution increased the ATP content and the rate of GSH synthesis of cold-stored hepatocytes during rewarming.  相似文献   

6.
Glutathione (GSH) is the primary source of reducing equivalents in most cells, contributes significantly to the cellular redox potential and can control differentiation, proliferation, and apoptosis. Using limb bud micromass cultures from Sprague Dawley rats and New Zealand White rabbits, GSH modulating agents, L-buthionine-S,R-sulfoximine (BSO) and diethyl maleate (DEM) altered the formation of Alcian blue positive chondrogenic foci. Limb bud micromass cultures were treated for 5 d with BSO (50 or 100 μM) or DEM (5–25 μM). GSH content was determined by HPLC analysis. In rat cultures, BSO treatment did not affect differentiation but did show GSH depletion. In rabbit cultures, BSO completely inhibited differentiation and significantly depleted GSH. Treatment of rat cultures with DEM resulted in the dose-dependent decrease of chondrogenic foci, which correlated with a dose-dependent depletion of GSH. DEM completely inhibited rabbit limb bud cell differentiation and depleted GSH by 44%. Inhibition of differentiation was confirmed in rabbit cultures by the reduction in BMP-4 content. Addition of N-acetylcysteine to rabbit micromass cultures restored chondrogenic foci differentiation seen following treatment with both DEM and BSO. These results show species differences in GSH depletion in rat vs. rabbit limb bud cells and implicate GSH and cysteine in affecting pathways involved in chondrocyte differentiation.  相似文献   

7.
Cultured hepatocytes were exposed to two chemicals, dinitrofluorobenzene (DNFB) and diethyl maleate (DEM), that abruptly deplete cellular stores of glutathione. Upon the loss of GSH, lipid peroxidation was evidenced by an accumulation of malondialdehyde in the cultures followed by the death of the hepatocytes. Pretreatment of the hepatocytes with a ferric iron chelator, deferoxamine, or the addition of an antioxidant, N,N'-diphenyl-p-phenylenediamine (DPPD), to the culture medium prevented both the lipid peroxidation and the cell death produced by either DNFB or DEM. However, neither deferoxamine nor DPPD prevented the depletion of GSH caused by either agent. Inhibition of glutathione reductase by 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU) or inhibition of catalase by aminotriazole sensitized the hepatocytes to the cytotoxicity of DNFB. In a similar manner, pretreatment with BCNU potentiated the cell killing by DEM. DPPD and deferoxamine protected hepatocytes pretreated with BCNU and then exposed to DNFB or DEM. These data indicate that an abrupt depletion of GSH leads to lipid peroxidation and cell death in cultured hepatocytes. It is proposed that GSH depletion sensitizes the hepatocyte to its constitutive flux of partially reduced oxygen species. Such an oxidative stress is normally detoxified by GSH-dependent mechanisms. However, with GSH depletion these activated oxygen species are toxic as a result of the iron-dependent formation of a potent oxidizing species.  相似文献   

8.
To date, glutathione (GSH) depletion is the earliest biochemical alteration shown in brains of Parkinson's disease patients, but the role of GSH in dopamine cell survival is debated. In this study we show that GSH depletion, produced with GSH synthesis inhibitor, L-buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine (BSO), induces selectively neuronal cell death in neuron/glia, but not in neuronal-enriched midbrain cultures and that cell death occurs with characteristics of necrosis and apoptosis. BSO produces a dose- and time-dependent generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in neurons. BSO activates extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERK-1/2), 4 and 6 h after treatment. MEK-1/2 and lipoxygenase (LOX) inhibitors, as well as ascorbic acid, prevent ERK-1/2 activation and neuronal loss, but the inhibition of nitric oxide sintase (NOS), cyclo-oxygenase (COX), c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p38 MAPK) does not have protective effects. Co-localization studies show that p-ERK-1/2 expression after BSO treatment increased in astrocytes and microglial cells, but not in neurons. Selective metabolic impairment of glial cells with fluoroacetate decreased ERK activation. However, blockade of microglial activation with minocycline did not. Our results indicate that neuronal death induced by GSH depletion is due to ROS-dependent activation of the ERK-1/2 signalling pathway in glial cells. These data may be of relevance in Parkinson's disease, where GSH depletion and glial dysfunction have been documented.  相似文献   

9.
Glycine prevention of cold ischemic injury in isolated hepatocytes   总被引:5,自引:2,他引:3  
Isolated hepatocytes suspended in a liver preservation solution (University of Wisconsin (UW) solution) and exposed to cold (5 degrees C) ischemia lose viability (LDH release) after 3 (76.5 +/- 2.6% extracellular LDH) and 4 days (90.3 +/- 5.7% extracellular LDH) storage when rewarmed (37 degrees C) in Krebs-Henseleit buffer. However, if 3 mM glycine is added to Krebs-Henseleit buffer the loss of LDH on rewarming was suppressed (% LDH = 24.4 +/- 2.2% and 33.2 +/- 3.0%, at 3 and 4 days, respectively). The protection by glycine could also be obtained by storing the hepatocytes in the UW solution containing 15 mM glycine and rewarming in the absence of glycine in Krebs-Henseleit buffer. There did not appear to be a relationship between the protection by glycine and glutathione concentration of the hepatocytes as shown by the lack of effect of a glutathione synthetase inhibitor (butathionine sulfoximine) on the protective effects of glycine. Other amino acids did not provide protection to hepatocytes exposed to cold ischemia. The mechanism of action of glycine is not known, but this compound may be important in improving cold storage of livers for transplantation.  相似文献   

10.
Expression of determined Asn-bound glycans (N-glycans) in cell surface glycoproteins regulates different processes in tumour cell biology. Specific patterns of N-glycosylation are displayed by highly metastatic cells and it has been shown that inhibition of N-glycan processing restrains cell proliferation and induces cell death via apoptosis. However, the mechanisms by which different N-glycosylation states may regulate cell viability and growth are not understood. Since malignant cells express high levels of intracellular glutathione (GSH) and a reduction of intracellular GSH induces cell death via apoptosis, we investigated whether GSH was involved in the induction of apoptosis by removal of cell surface N-glycans. We found that removal of N-glycans from cell surface proteins by treating the rhabdomyosarcoma cell line S4MH with tunicamycin or N-glycosidase resulted in a reduction in intracellular GSH content and cell death via apoptosis. Moreover, GSH depletion caused by the specific inhibitor of GSH synthesis BSO induced apoptosis in S4MH cells. This data indicates that adequate N-glycosylation of cell surface glycoproteins is required for maintenance of intracellular GSH levels that are necessary for cell survival and proliferation.  相似文献   

11.
In the present study the influence of pretreatment with various GSH depletors such as buthionine sulfoximine (BSO) and diethylmaleate (DEM) was investigated in rats following cerebral postischemic reperfusion. Moreover, the effect of diethyldithiocarbamic acid (DDC), inhibitor of endogenous Cu,Zn-SOD, was evaluated. A significant depletion (40% of control value) of GSH levels was observed 24 h after DEM administration; after 48 h the value reached control levels. BSO showed maximal GSH depletion (59%) 24 h after administration and it was constant for almost 48 h. DDC administration caused a marked decrease (60%) of Cu,Zn-SOD activity 4 h after the injection and induced a marked decrease in percentage of survival with respect to control (untreated, ischemic) rats, when administered 4 h before ischemia. BSO and DEM prolonged the survival time of animals when administered 24 h before ischemia. This last paradoxical effect is unclear at present, but it might be due to an influence on glutamate cascade.  相似文献   

12.
Heating of Ehrlich ascites tumour (EAT) cells and mouse fibroblast LM cells to 43 or 44 degrees C respectively, results in an increased level of reduced glutathione (GSH). The maximum elevation in GSH was to 140 per cent for LM cells and to 120 per cent for EAT cells. No increase of GSH in EAT cells was observed after heating at 44 degrees C. LM cells were treated with diethylmaleate (DEM) and the EAT cells with buthionine-sulphoximine (BSO) at non-toxic doses to deplete the levels of GSH. No effect on thermosensitivity or on the development of thermotolerance was observed when the DEM and BSO treatments were chosen such that the lowering of GSH was just down to the level of detection (about 5 per cent of control). When higher concentrations of DEM were used, thermal sensitization was observed. The activity of the pentose phosphate pathway (PPP) was also investigated because of its importance in supplying NADPH for the regeneration of GSH from GSSG and for the endogenous production of polyols. Hyperthermia was found to enhance markedly the flux of glucose through the PPP. While the DEM treatment inhibited glucose oxidation through the PPP, BSO addition to the cells resulted in a slightly increased activity of the PPP. The PPP activity of thermotolerant cells was lower (fibroblasts) or hardly affected (EAT cells) compared to control cells. The extent of PPP activation by hyperthermia was comparable for thermotolerant and control cells. For the two cell lines studied neither a high level of GSH nor an active PPP is a prerequisite for the development of thermotolerance.  相似文献   

13.
Glutathione (GSH) plays a role in many toxicologically important metabolic processes. It was previously established that L-buthionine S,R-sulphoximine (BSO), a specific inhibitor of (- glutamylcysteine synthetase, reduces the GSH content more efficiently in rat (Fa32) than in human (HEp-G2) hepatoma-derived cells. We therefore investigated whether the cystathionase inhibitor propargylglycine (PPG) could further decrease the BSO-induced GSH depletion in HEp-G2 cells. The influence of the cystathionine precursors N-acetylmethionine, methionine and homocysteine on the cytotoxicity of diethyl maleate (DEM) and diamide [1,1'-azobis(N,N-dimethylformamide)] was also investigated. PPG reduced the GSH content in both cell lines. A further GSH decrease in HEp-G2 was obtained when using a BSO + PPG combination containing relatively high concentrations of PPG. BSO diminished the toxicity of PPG. Homocysteine was the most efficacious of the tested cystathionine precursors in increasing the GSH content and reducing the cytotoxicity of DEM and diamide in Fa32 and HEp-G2 cells.  相似文献   

14.

Background

Glutathione is considered essential for survival in mammalian cells and yeast but not in prokaryotic cells. The presence of a nuclear pool of glutathione has been demonstrated but its role in cellular proliferation and differentiation is still a matter of debate.

Principal Findings

We have studied proliferation of 3T3 fibroblasts for a period of 5 days. Cells were treated with two well known depleting agents, diethyl maleate (DEM) and buthionine sulfoximine (BSO), and the cellular and nuclear glutathione levels were assessed by analytical and confocal microscopic techniques, respectively. Both agents decreased total cellular glutathione although depletion by BSO was more sustained. However, the nuclear glutathione pool resisted depletion by BSO but not with DEM. Interestingly, cell proliferation was impaired by DEM, but not by BSO. Treating the cells simultaneously with DEM and with glutathione ethyl ester to restore intracellular GSH levels completely prevented the effects of DEM on cell proliferation.

Conclusions

Our results demonstrate the importance of nuclear glutathione in the control of cell proliferation in 3T3 fibroblasts and suggest that a reduced nuclear environment is necessary for cells to progress in the cell cycle.  相似文献   

15.
Hepatocytes isolated from the rat liver were stored for up to 72 hr at 4 degrees C in a tissue culture medium (Liebovitz-15) at different pH values to determine how pH affects hepatocyte viability. This is a model to simulate cold storage of livers for transplantation and determine the optimal pH for maintenance of liver cell function. The cells were stored in the absence of oxygen. At the end of cold storage the percentage of the total cellular LDH released into the extracellular medium was used as a measure of hepatocyte viability. Also, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release was determined in hepatocytes incubated at normothermia (37 degrees C) for 90 min following 72 hr of cold storage. The results demonstrate that hepatocytes tolerate a wide range of pH values in the storage medium and that only about 10% of the total LDH was released from hepatocytes stored up to 72 hr at pH's from 5.0 to 8.0. Normothermic incubation, however, demonstrated that the pH of the storage medium affected viability. After 48 hr of storage only hepatocytes stored at pH values from 7.0 to 8.0 remained viable (LDH release similar to that of freshly incubated hepatocytes = 28 +/- 7.2%). After 72 hr of storage and 90 min of normothermic incubation, hepatocytes incubated at all pH values studied were nonviable (greater than 60% release of LDH). These results suggest that the optimal pH for storage of hepatocytes at 4 degrees C is near neutrality (7.0 to 7.4).  相似文献   

16.
Glial Cells Mediate Toxicity in Glutathione-Depleted Mesencephalic Cultures   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We have examined the role of glial cells in the toxicity that results from inhibition of reduced glutathione (GSH) synthesis by L-buthionine sulfoximine (BSO) in mesencephalic cell cultures. We show that GSH depletion, to levels that cause total cell loss in cultures containing neurons and glial cells, has no effect on cell viability in enriched neuronal cultures. An increase in the plating cell density sensitizes glia-containing cultures to GSH depletion-induced toxicity. This suggests that cell death in this model is the consequence of events that are induced by GSH depletion and are mediated by glial cells. The antioxidant ascorbic acid and the lipoxygenase (LOX) inhibitor nordihydroguaiaretic acid (1-10 microM) provide full protection from BSO toxicity, indicating that arachidonic acid metabolism through the LOX pathway and the generation of reactive oxygen species play a role in the loss of cell viability. In contrast, inhibition of nitric oxide (NO) synthase affords only partial protection from BSO toxicity, suggesting that increased NO production cannot entirely account for cell death in this model. Our data provide evidence that GSH depletion in the presence of glial cells leads to neuronal degeneration that can be prevented by inhibition of LOX. This may have relevance to the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease, where glial activation and depletion of GSH have been found in the substantia nigra pars compacta.  相似文献   

17.
Diethyl maleate (DEM) (5 mM) and ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS) (35 mM) treatments rapidly depleted cellular reduced glutathione (GSH) below detectable levels (1 nmol/10(6) cells), and induced lipid peroxidation and necrotic cell death in freshly isolated rat hepatocytes. In hepatocytes incubated with 2.5 mM DEM and 10 mM EMS, however, the complete depletion of cellular GSH observed was not sufficient to induce lipid peroxidation or cell death. Instead, DEM- and EMS-induced lipid peroxidation and cell death were dependent on increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) production as measured by increases in dichlorofluorescein fluorescence. The addition of antioxidants (vitamin E succinate and deferoxamine) prevented lipid peroxidation and cell death, suggesting that lipid peroxidation is involved in the sequence of events leading to necrotic cell death induced by DEM and EMS. To investigate the subcellular site of ROS generation, the cytochrome P450 inhibitor, SKF525A, was found to reduce EMS-induced lipid peroxidation but did not protect against the loss of cell viability, suggesting a mitochondrial origin for the toxic lipid peroxidation event. In agreement with this conclusion, mitochondrial electron transport inhibitors (rotenone, thenoyltrifluoroacetone and antimycin A) increased EMS-induced lipid peroxidation and cell death, while the mitochondrial uncoupler, carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone, blocked EMS- and DEM-mediated ROS production and lipid peroxidation. Furthermore, EMS treatment resulted in the significant loss of mitochondrial alpha-tocopherol shortly after its addition, and this loss preceded losses in cellular alpha-tocopherol levels. Treatment of hepatocytes with cyclosporin A, a mitochondrial permeability transition inhibitor, oxypurinol, a xanthine oxidase inhibitor, or BAPTA-AM, a calcium chelator, provided no protection against EMS-induced cell death or lipid peroxidation. Our results indicate that DEM and EMS induce cell death by a similar mechanism, which is dependent on the induction of ROS production and lipid peroxidation, and mitochondria are the major source for this toxic ROS generation. Cellular GSH depletion in itself does not appear to be responsible for the large increases in ROS production and lipid peroxidation observed.  相似文献   

18.
We previously described the entity of cold-induced apoptosis to rat hepatocytes and characterized its major, iron-dependent pathway. However, after cold incubation in some solutions, e.g. cell culture medium, hepatocytes show an additional, yet uncharacterized component of cold-induced injury. We here assessed the effects of organ preservation solutions on both components of cold-induced injury and tried to further characterize the iron-independent component. None of the preservation solutions (University of Wisconsin, histidine-tryptophan-ketoglutarate, Euro-Collins, histidine-lactobionate, sodium-lactobionate-sucrose and Celsior solutions) provided significant protection against cold-induced cell injury (LDH release after 24-h cold incubation/3h rewarming >65% for all solutions); three solutions even enhanced cold-induced injury. However, when the predominant iron-dependent mechanism was eliminated by the addition of iron chelators, all preservation solutions yielded hepatocyte protection that was clearly superior to the one obtainable in cell culture medium or Krebs-Henseleit buffer with iron chelators (LDH release after 24-h cold incubation/3h rewarming 相似文献   

19.
K W Kang  Y M Pak  N D Kim 《Nitric oxide》1999,3(3):265-271
Diethylmaleate (DEM) and buthionine sulfoximine (BSO), glutathione (GSH)-depleting agents, reduced the metabolic activity and the protein level of iNOS in both macrophages and hepatocytes activated by lipopolysaccharide (LPS). In this study, we examined the effects of DEM and BSO on iNOS expression in LPS-treated mice under the assumption that the level of GSH may alter the expression of nitric oxide synthase. Serum levels of interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) were also determined. DEM markedly decreased the levels of hepatic GSH in response to LPS. Treatment of mice with DEM significantly reduced serum nitrite/nitrate levels and hepatic iNOS protein and mRNA induction by LPS. Although BSO inhibited the level of hepatic GSH in LPS-treated mice, the agent did not alter serum nitrite/nitrate levels and hepatic iNOS expression. DEM completely inhibited an increase of serum IL-1beta level by LPS, whereas BSO failed to inhibit it. Neither DEM nor BSO significantly affected the induction of serum TNF-alpha level by LPS. These results showed that DEM and BSO differentially affect the expression of iNOS in endotoxemic mice, suggesting the possibility that suppression of iNOS expression by DEM may be associated with the inhibition of IL-1beta but not of TNF-alpha.  相似文献   

20.
The hypoxic and euoxic radiation response for Chinese hamster lung and A549 human lung carcinoma cells was obtained under conditions where their nonprotein thiols, consisting primarily of glutathione (GSH), were depleted by different mechanisms. The GSH conjugating reagent diethylmaleate (DEM) was compared to DL-buthionine-S,R-sulfoximine (BSO), an inhibitor of glutathionine biosynthesis. Each reagent depleted cellular GSH to less than 5% of control values. A 2-hr exposure to 0.5 mM DEM or a 4- or 24-hr exposure to BSO at 10 or 1 mM, respectively, depleted cellular GSH to less than 5% of control values. Both agents sensitized cells irradiated under air or hypoxic conditions. When GSH levels are lowered to less than 5% by both agents, hypoxic DEM-treated cells exhibited slightly greater X-ray sensitization than hypoxic BSO-treated cells. The D0's for hypoxic survival curves were as follows: control, 4.87 Gy; DEM, 3.22 Gy; and BSO, 4.30 Gy for the V79 cells and 5.00 Gy versus 4.02 Gy for BSO-treated A549 cells. The D0's for aerobic V79 cells were 1.70 Gy versus 1.13 Gy, DEM, and 1.43 Gy for BSO-treated cells. The D0's for the aerobic A549 were 1.70 and 1.20 for BSO-treated cells. The aerobic and anoxic sensitization of the cells results in the OER's of 2.8 and 3.0 for the DEM- and BSO-treated cells compared to 2.9 for the V79 control A549. BSO-treated cells showed an OER of 3.3 versus 3 for the control. Our results suggest that GSH depletion by either BSO or DEM sensitizes aerobic cells to radiation but does not appreciably alter the OER.  相似文献   

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