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Xenobiotic-mediated production of superoxide by primary cultures of rat cerebral endothelial cells, astrocytes, and neurones
Authors:Bayol-Denizot C  Daval J L  Netter P  Minn A
Affiliation:UMR CNRS-Universit?e Henri Poincar?e-Nancy 1 No 7561, Laboratoire de Pharmacologie, Facult?e de M?edecine, Vandoeuvre-l?es-Nancy, France.
Abstract:Previous works of our group demonstrated that xenobiotic metabolism by brain microsomes or cultured cerebral cells may promote the formation of reactive oxygen species. In order to characterise the risk of oxidative stress to both the central nervous system and the blood-brain barrier, we measured in the present work the release of superoxide in the culture medium of rat cerebrovascular endothelial cells during the metabolism of menadione, anthraquinone, diquat or nitrofurazone. Assays were run in the same experimental conditions on primary cultures of rat neurones and astrocytes. Quinone metabolism efficiently produced superoxide, but the production of radicals during the metabolism of diquat or nitrofurazone was very low, as a probable result of their reduced transport inside the cells. In all cell types assayed, superoxide production was time- and concentration-dependent, and cultured astrocytes always produced the highest amounts of radicals. Superoxide formation by microsomes prepared from the cultured cells was decreased by immunoinhibition of NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase or by its irreversible inhibition by diphenyliodonium chloride, suggesting the involvement of this flavoprotein in radical production. Cerebrovascular endothelial cells cultured on collagen-coated filters produced equivalent amounts of superoxide both at their luminal side and through the artificial basement membrane, suggesting that in vivo, endothelial superoxide production may endanger adjacent astrocytes and neurones.
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