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Query: EC:2.6.1.1 (
aspartate aminotransferase
)
21,665
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hepatic cytokine gene expression is independently stimulated by circulating microbial products and reductions in the cellular O2 supply. Although these stimuli occur sequentially after gram-negative bacteremia, it is unknown whether their interplay augments production of interleukin (IL)-1 by the liver. We studied the effects of intraportal Escherichia coli (EC) bacteremia and secondary constant-flow hypoxia (Po2, approximately 46 Torr for 30 min) on IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta gene expression in ex situ buffer-perfused rat livers over 180 min (n = 67). At t = 0, normoxic EC and normal saline (NS) controls received 10(9) live EC serotype 055:B5 and 0.9% NaCl, respectively; in livers subjected to EC+hypoxia-reoxygenation (H/R) and NS+H/R, hypoxia began 0.5 h after EC or NS and was followed by 120 min of reoxygenation. Portal and hepatic venous perfusates were serially analyzed for bacterial colony-forming units, O2 uptake, and
aspartate aminotransferase
. At 60 min (peak hypoxia) and 180 min, cDNAs for IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta were hybridized to whole liver RNA, and IL-1 beta protein levels in venous perfusates were assessed. Intrahepatic levels of reduced glutathione (GSH) were measured as an index of oxidative stress. Compared with normoxic EC, IL-1 alpha transcripts decreased at 180 min in EC+H/R livers (P < 0.0001) as did IL-1 beta mRNA (P < 0.05), despite similar EC clearance, GSH levels, posthypoxic O2 uptake, and
aspartate aminotransferase
release. Hepatic secretion of IL-1 beta likewise fell in EC+H/R vs. EC controls (P < 0.005). Prostaglandin H synthase-2 (COX-2) message accumulation was not enhanced by H/R, and indomethacin did not reverse H/R-mediated suppression of IL-1 production. In contrast, H/R-related falls in EC-induced IL-1S expression were reversed by allopurinol or
catalase
. Thus brief hypoxic stress of the liver causing neither GSH depletion nor functional impairment downregulates postbacteremic IL-1 expression by a mechanism involving O2 radicals but not cyclooxygenase metabolites.
...
PMID:Brief hypoxic stress downregulates E. coli-induced IL-1 alpha and IL-1 beta gene expression in perfused liver. 894 69
The role of oxidative stress as a mechanism of hepatic injury caused by isoniazid (INH) was investigated in young growing rats. The interaction of moderate and severe degree of protein-energy malnutrition (PEM) was also investigated. Hepatic injury was produced by giving 50 mg/kg/day of INH for 2 weeks. Liver showed kupffer cell hyperplasia along with patchy sinusoidal congestion in hematoxylin (H) and eosin (E) staining. However, diffuse microglobules of oil red O' positive fat globules could be demonstrated in frozen sections stained with oil red O'. The concomitant elevation of serum ALT/
AST
added support to the histopathologic injury. Electronmicroscopic analysis revealed the proliferation of rough endoplasmic reticulum in INH-treated groups. The glutathione and related thiols were decreased significantly by INH both in blood and liver tissues, indicating a decrease in protective mechanism. Glutathione reductase activity was elevated concomitantly in both the tissues. A significant decrease in the activity of glutathione peroxidase and
catalase
is again indicative of diminished capacity to handle the disposal of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and lipid peroxides. All these alterations indicated that the damage to the liver cell could well be operating through the inefficient disposal of superoxides (O-2) and H2O2. A profound decrease in the protective mechanism further aggravated the picture in moderate and severe PEM, which was observed with INH alone.
...
PMID:Study of oxidative stress in isoniazid-induced hepatic injury in young rats with and without protein-energy malnutrition. 902 73
The aim of this study was to determine whether the administration of free radical antagonists, immediately before and during the early minutes of reperfusion, improves muscle survival 24 hr after a period of ischemia. Rabbit rectus femoris muscles were isolated, made ischemic for 3 1/2 hr and treated with either desferrioxamine (DFX), an Fe3+ chelator, superoxide dismutase and
catalase
(SOD & CAT), which quench superoxide and hydrogen peroxide, or allopurinol, an inhibitor of xanthine oxidase (XO). After 24 hr reperfusion, muscle viability (+/-s.e.m.), measured by the nitro blue tetrazolium (NBT) vital staining technique, was 41.6 +/- 11.3% for saline-treated ischemic controls, 30.6 +/- 7.6% for DFX-treated, 46.7 +/- 10.3% for SOD & CAT-treated, and 43.3 +/- 9.5% for allopurinol-treated muscles. None of the treated groups differed significantly from the ischemic control group. Tissue myeloperoxidase, ATP and reduced glutathione levels, and plasma lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and
aspartate transaminase
(
AST
) levels were increased by ischemia and reperfusion in all groups, but the changes did not differ between the treatment groups. Levels of XO in the rabbit muscle were determined and found to be very low in both normal and postischemic muscle. As XO is the target enzyme of allopurinol, its absence provides a basis for the lack of effect of this agent. However, it is not clear why DFX and SOD & CAT had no protective effect.
...
PMID:Influence of postischemic administration of oxyradical antagonists on ischemic injury to rabbit skeletal muscle. 939 70
The hepatocellular necrogenic and regenerative responses of newly weaned rats (21 days old) to a sublethal dose of thioacetamide (6.6 mmol kg-1) were studied in comparison to adult (6-month old rats), in terms of liver injury, antioxidant defense systems and cell proliferation. Hepatocellular necrosis, detected by serum
aspartate aminotransferase
, was less severe in newly weaned rats than in adult animals and was parallel to previous changes in the activity of microsomal FAD monooxygenase system responsible for thioacetamide biotransformation. Liver damage in hepatocytes from newly weaned rats was also detected by the decreased levels of glutathione and protein thiol groups (47%, p < 0.001 and 52%, p < 0.001 vs. untreated, respectively) and by the enhanced malondialdehyde production (334%, p < 0.001) and glutathione S-transferase activity (384%, p < 0.001). No significant differences were detected in these values when compared to adults. Changes in cytosolic and mitochondrial superoxide dismutase and
catalase
activities in hepatocytes from newly weaned rats at 24 h, following thioacetamide (49%, p < 0.001; 50% and 53%, p < 0.001 vs. untreated, respectively), were less severe against those in adult hepatocytes at 48 h of intoxication, and the increases in glutathione peroxidase and glutathione reductase activities were significantly lowered: 25% (p < 0.001) and 41% (p < 0.001), respectively. Post-necrotic DNA synthesis in hepatocytes from newly weaned rats peaked at 48 h of intoxication, while in adults a more intense peak appeared at 72 h preceded by a sharp decrease in tetraploid population. These differences indicate that the lower necrogenic response against the same dose of thioacetamide in newly weaned rats may be due to the lower rate of thioacetamide biotransformation and to the earlier onset of cell division. Accordingly, the growing liver from newly weaned rats presents advantages against the necrogenic aggression of thioacetamide, first, because the diminished activity of its specific microsomal detoxification system, and second because the earlier increase in the proliferative response prevents the progression of injury permitting an earlier restoration of liver function.
...
PMID:Necrogenic and regenerative responses of liver of newly weaned rats against a sublethal dose of thioacetamide. 960 62
In this study, we examined whether the production of hydrogen peroxide by peroxisome proliferators causes oxidative DNA damage in the form of 8-oxodeoxyguanosine (8-oxodG) and hepatic injury, and whether it is related to their tumor-promoting or carcinogenic activities in female rats treated with the peroxisome proliferators clofibrate and perfluorodecanoic acid (PFDA). Clofibrate has tumor-promoting and carcinogenic activities, whereas PFDA does not. We also tested whether peroxisome proliferators directly induce mutagenic events in Salmonella typhimurium strains TA 98 and TA 1537. Rats were treated either by 5% clofibrate in diet or by an i.p. injection of corn oil containing 10 mg/kg body weight of PFDA every week for 2 or 8 weeks. 8-OxodG in liver DNA was analyzed by HPLC coupled with an electrochemical detector. Hepatic injury was evidenced by liver enlargement and by levels of serum enzymes,
aspartate aminotransferase
(
AST
) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT), and hepatic gamma-glutamylpeptidase (gamma-GT) activity. Clofibrate and PFDA increased the activity of
catalase
about or less than 2-fold, whereas FAO activity was increased about 6 to 7-fold by clofibrate and about 3 to 4-fold by PFDA. Neither clofibrate nor PFDA induced mutation at any dose tested. Clofibrate significantly increased the formation of 8-oxodG, but PFDA only slightly increased. Serum
AST
and ALT levels, and hepatic gamma-GT activity were not significantly changed at both time points, whereas the ratio of liver/body weight was significantly increased by clofibrate and PFDA at 8 weeks. These data imply that the magnitude of the production of hydrogen peroxide-generated FAO is related to the induction of oxidative DNA damage by peroxisome proliferators, and their tumor-promoting or carcinogenic activities. However, the effect of hydrogen peroxide in hepatic injury is not clear.
...
PMID:Formation of 8-oxodeoxyguanosine in liver DNA and hepatic injury by peroxisome proliferator clofibrate and perfluorodecanoic acid in rats. 964 51
Age-associated changes in liver injury and post-necrotic regeneration were studied in rats aged 6 and 30 months in a period of 96 h following a dose of thioacetamide (6.6 mmol/kg body weight). Hepatocellular necrosis was detected in both groups by serum
aspartate aminotransferase
, but the severity of injury was significantly lower (one fourth, p < 0.001) in the oldest. Differences were observed in hepatocyte FAD monooxygenase activity between 6 and 30 months old rats at 24 h (278 versus 170%, p < 0.001, respectively) and also in GSH/GSSG ratio, in protein thiol groups and in malondialdehyde. Glutathione peroxidase, glutathione reductase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activities rose markedly in both groups, this increase being slightly lower in the oldest. Superoxide dismutase and
catalase
did not show significant changes between both groups. At the end of the 96 h experimental period the restoration towards normal of GSG/GSSG, protein thiols malondialdehyde and the activities of Cu-Zn superoxide dismutase and
catalase
were significantly lower in hepatocytes from 30 months old rats. We summarize that the main age-related changes in the sequenced process of liver injury and regeneration occurred to a lesser extent in severity of injury and delayed response in the post-necrotic restoration of liver function, probably due to a lower increase in antioxidant enzyme system.
...
PMID:Aging delays the post-necrotic restoration of liver function. 969 17
Total superoxide dismutase (SOD, EC 1.15.1.1) and
catalase
(CAT, EC 1.11.1.6) activities in erythrocytes and the glutamic acid-oxalacetic acid-transaminase (GOT,
EC 2.6.1.1
) and glutamic acid-pyruvic acid-transaminase (GPT, EC 2.6.1.2) activities in the plasma were measured in experimental groups of carps (Cyprinus carpio L.) exposed to cadmium in a concentration of 20 mg Cd/l water under aquarium conditions for 6, 12, 18 and 24 hours and in control fishes. It was shown that the total activity of SOD in the erythrocytes is significantly decreased after 12, 18 and 24 hours of cadmium exposure. Increased activities of CAT (after 24 hours) in the erythrocytes and GOT and GPT in the plasma were found in cadmium-treated fishes. At the same time the concentration of blood haemoglobin and haematocrit values were significantly diminished. These results indicate that cadmium causes oxidative stress and tissue damage in the exposed fishes.
...
PMID:Activities of superoxide dismutase and catalase in erythrocytes and transaminases in the plasma of carps (Cyprinus carpio L.) exposed to cadmium. 972 86
The purpose of our study was to assess the effects of experimental dicroceliosis on the antioxidant defense capability of the liver in hamsters. Studies were carried out at 80 and 120 days after infection with an oral dose of 40 metacercariae of Dicrocoelium dendriticum. The parasitic pathology was ascertained by the presence of fluke eggs in feces, increased serum ALT and
AST
activities, and histological findings. The concentration of thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBARS) and the ratio of oxidized to reduced glutathione (GSSG/GSH), measured as markers of oxidative stress, were significantly increased [TBARS: +40% and +84% at 80 and 120 days postinfection (p.i.), respectively; GSSG/GSH: +200% and +117%]. Dicroceliosis increased Se-dependent glutathione peroxidase (GPx) activity in both cytosol (+24% and +46%) and mitochondria (+73% and +41%). Superoxide dismutase activity was significantly reduced in cytosol (-19% and -38%) and mitochondria (-20% and -39%). No significant change was found in the activity of Se-independent GPx or
catalase
. The ratio of glutathione peroxidase/glutathione reductase at 80 and 120 days p.i. was increased by 25% and 63%, respectively. Gamma-glutamyl cysteinyl synthetase activity was increased by 27% and 20%, respectively. Our data indicate that although dicroceliosis courses with activation of antioxidant enzymes and glutathione synthesis, inefficient scavenging of reactive oxygen species takes place, resulting in oxidative liver damage.
...
PMID:Oxidative stress and changes in liver antioxidant enzymes induced by experimental dicroceliosis in hamsters. 1034 40
The effects of thymoquinone (TQ) and desferrioxamine (DFO) against carbon tetrachloride (CCl4)-induced hepatotoxicity were investigated. A single dose of CCl4 (20 microl/kg, i.p.) induced hepatotoxicity, manifested biochemically by significant elevation of activities of serum enzymes, such as alanine transaminase (ALT, EC: 2.6.1.2) ,
aspartate transaminase
(
AST
, EC: 2.6.1.1) and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH, EC: 1.1.1.27). Hepatotoxicity was further evidenced by significant decrease of total sulfhydryl (-SH) content, and
catalase
(EC: 1.11.1.6) activity in hepatic tissues and significant increase in hepatic lipid peroxidation measured as malondialdhyde (MDA). Pretreatment of mice with DFO (200 mg/kg i.p.) 1 h before CCl4 injection or administration of TQ (16 mg/kg/day, p.o.) in drinking water, starting 5 days before CCl4 injection and continuing during the experimental period, ameliorated the hepatotoxicity induced by CCl4, as evidenced by a significant reduction in the elevated levels of serum enzymes as well as a significant decrease in the hepatic MDA content and a significant increase in the total sulfhydryl content 24 h after CCl4 administration. In a separate in vitro assay, TQ and DFO inhibited the non-enzymatic lipid peroxidation of normal mice liver homogenate induced by Fe3+/ascorbate in a dose-dependent manner. These results indicate that TQ and DFO are efficient cytoprotective agents against CCl4-induced hepotoxicity, possibly through inhibition of the production of oxygen free radicals that cause lipid peroxidation.
...
PMID:Protective effects of thymoquinone and desferrioxamine against hepatotoxicity of carbon tetrachloride in mice. 1088 36
In the past decade it became accepted that free radicals, lipid peroxidation and antioxidant defense play a role in various tissues damages, thus in certain liver diseases as well. Since only limited data have been reported concerning the oxidative stress in viral hepatitis, a comparative study was performed in patients (pts) with chronic hepatitis C and alcoholic liver disease. In addition, the effects of a flavonolignan drug silymarin were assessed. 10 pts with chronic hepatitis C, 5 pts with alcoholic hepatitis and 13 pts with alcoholic cirrhosis have been investigated. Biochemical liver tests (serum bilirubin, aminotransferases, ALT,
AST
, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), pseudocholinesterase, prothrombin), malandialdehyde (MDA) levels in plasma and red blood cell (RBC) hemolysate, superoxide radical generating capacity of stimulated polymorphonuclear granulocytes (PMN), plasma concentrations of reduced (GSH) and oxidized (GSSG) glutathione, vitamin A, luteine and beta carotene, furthermore RBC superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione peroxidase (GPx) and
catalase
activities were determined. The level of plasma MDA--as the marker of lipid peroxidation--was highest in alcoholic cirrhosis (five times of normal) (p < 0.05), the RBC hemolysate MDA was most elevated in chronic hepatitis C (p < 0.05). The mean PMNs' superoxide radical generating capacity was 116.6% of normal control in alcoholic hepatitis, where the mean GSH level was the lowest (89.8% of normal). Plasma vitamin A content was lowest in alcoholic cirrhosis (68% of control) (p < 0.05). SOD activity was elevated in both chronic hepatitis C and alcoholic cirrhosis, where GPx activity was decreased (p < 0.05). There was a correlation between LDH and SOD activities (r = 0.77, p = 0.015). Silymarin treatment of one month duration resulted in normalization of serum bilirubin in 55% of treated pts,
AST
became normal in 45%, and RBC hemolyzate MDA level normalized in similar rate. A significant increase in both GSH and retinoids was found. Alterations in oxidative stress and antioxidant defense system were shown in chronic hepatitis C, not only in alcoholic liver disease. The parameters of lipid peroxidation and antioxidant defense may be useful surrogate markers for monitoring pts with liver disease during hepatoprotective treatment.
...
PMID:[Oxidative stress and antioxidant defense in alcoholic liver disease and chronic hepatitis C]. 1096 2
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