Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In this study we examined the role of oxygen-derived free radicals in the pathogenesis of acute gastric mucosal lesion induced by obstructive jaundice in rats. Rats were divided into 4 groups as follows: control (sham operation), jaundiced (ligation and dissection of bile duct), vagotomized (truncal vagotomy), and vagotomized with jaundice group. The water immersion restraint procedure was performed. The water immersion restraint procedure was performed. The results obtained are as follows: jaundiced group showed significant increase of ulcer index (UI) and significant decrease of gastric mucosal blood flow (GMBF) and gastric mucosal potential difference (PD). However, intragastric pH (pH) was unchanged compared to the control group. Oxygen radical generating system (gastric mucosal XOD activity and thiobarbiturate acid) and oxygen radical scavenging system (gastric mucosal SOD activity and GSH-px activity) were higher than those of control group. Vagotomized group showed significant increase of pH compared to the control group. Oxygen generating system and scavenging system were unchanged compared to the control group. Vagotomized with jaundice group showed depression of UI and improvement of oxygen radical generating system and scavenging system. However GMBF, PD nad pH were unchanged compared to the jaundiced group. These results suggest that oxygen radical play some role in the development of acute gastric mucosal lesion induced by obstructive jaundice.
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PMID:[Role of oxygen radicals in the pathogenesis of acute gastric mucosal lesion under obstructive jaundice]. 831 98

Toluene and its metabolites have been studied with respect to their reactive oxygen species-enhancing potential in isolated systems and in vivo. The induction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) production was assayed using the probe 2',7'-dichlorodihydrofluorescin diacetate (DCFH-DA). Intraperitoneal injection of toluene, benzyl alcohol or benzaldehyde caused a significant elevation in the rate of ROS formation within hepatic mitochondrial fractions (P2). In the brain, only toluene induced ROS formation, while benzyl alcohol and benzaldehyde did not have any effect. Glutathione (GSH) levels were depressed in liver and brain regions from toluene-treated rats. However, no such depression was evident in brains treated with toluene metabolites. P2 fractions from phenobarbital-pretreated rats exhibited a heightened ROS response when challenged with toluene, in vitro. Pretreatment of rats in vivo with 4-methylpyrazole, an alcohol dehydrogenase inhibitor, or sodium cyanamide, an aldehyde dehydrogenase inhibitor, prior to exposure to toluene, caused a significant decrease and increase, respectively, in toluene-stimulated rates of ROS generation in the CNS and liver. Electron spin resonance spectroscopy, employing the spin trap 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO), was conducted. Incubation of the spin trap with P2 fractions and toluene or benzaldehyde elicited a spectrum corresponding to the hydroxyl radical. Incubation of benzaldehyde with aldehyde dehydrogenase produced a strong signal that was blocked completely by superoxide dismutase and inhibited partially by catalase, suggesting the presence of superoxide radicals and the involvement of the iron-catalyzed Haber-Weiss reaction leading to the production of hydroxyl radicals. Thus, ROS generation during toluene catabolism may occur at two steps: cytochrome P450 oxidation and aldehyde dehydrogenase oxidation. In addition, GSH may play an important role in protection against the induction of ROS generation in the CNS and liver following exposure to toluene.
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PMID:Free radical induction in the brain and liver by products of toluene catabolism. 839 73

This study evaluated potential contributions of daunorubicin and its principle metabolite, daunorubicinol, to the cardiotoxicity of daunorubicin therapy. Daunorubicin (15 mg/kg) or placebo (normal saline) was administered by iv bolus to New Zealand white rabbits and 3 to 4 days later, hearts were removed to measure contractility (dF/dt), concentrations of daunorubicin and daunorubicinol, and evidence of oxidative stress on glutathione and glutathione peroxidase. Contractile function of isolated atria and papillary muscles was depressed (p < 0.05). Daunorubicinol exceeded daunorubicin concentration in the heart (p < 0.005) with a ratio of metabolite to parent drug of 26 in atrial and 32 in ventricular tissue. There was a significant correlation between peak plasma (r = -0.63; p < 0.05) or cardiac concentration (r = -0.78; p < 0.02) of daunorubicinol, but not daunorubicin, and depression of dF/dt in papillary muscles. In separate in vitro studies, daunorubicinol at a concentration (5.5 micrograms/g tissue or 10 microM) approximating that observed ex vivo in heart inhibited Ca2+ uptake into cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum vesicles by 39 +/- 3%, whereas 10 microM daunorubicin (14-fold higher than actual ex vivo cardiac concentrations) did not demonstrate any detectable inhibition. Daunorubicin treatment failed to significantly alter concentrations of GSH or GSSG or activities of glutathione peroxidase in the heart. Thus, cardiac dysfunction observed 3 to 4 days after a single dose of daunorubicin did not clearly relate to oxidative stress, but was associated with a cardiac concentration of daunorubicinol that appeared sufficiently high to impair Ca2+ metabolism.
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PMID:Daunorubicin-induced cardiac injury in the rabbit: a role for daunorubicinol? 844 96

In mammalian systems, the heme oxygenase (HO) isozymes HO-1 (HSP32) and HO-2 oxidatively cleave the heme molecule to produce bile pigments and carbon monoxide. Although HO-1 is inducible by various chemicals in systemic organs and cell culture systems, this communication reports for the first time the induction of this stress protein and its transcript by a chemical in the brain. In addition, this study demonstrates expression of HO-1 in select populations of cells in the brain in response to GSH depletion. Specifically, treatment of adult rats with diethyl maleate (DEM; 4.7 mmol/kg) caused a pronounced decrease in brain GSH content within 1 h. GSH levels remained significantly depressed for at least 24 h postinjection. Northern blot analysis of brain poly(A)+ mRNA following DEM treatment revealed on the average a sixfold increase in the 1.8-kb HO-1 mRNA level compared with that of controls; concomitant with this change was a decrease in GSH levels. Total brain HO activity was not significantly altered along with the increase in HO-1 mRNA level. The increase in transcription of HO-1 was a direct response to GSH depletion, as judged by the observation that treatment of neonatal rats with L-buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine (BSO) (3 mmol/kg, twice daily, for 2 days), a selective inhibitor of GSH synthesis, caused a marked depression in total brain GSH level and a concomitant increase in brain 1.8-kb HO-1 mRNA content. The magnitude of the increase was up to approximately 11.5-fold that of the control level, as evidenced by northern blot analysis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Glutathione depletion induces heme oxygenase-1 (HSP32) mRNA and protein in rat brain. 845 37

Ectopic overexpression of the agouti protein in the lethal yellow (A y/a) mouse causes a yellow coat as well as the lethal yellow syndrome. Presence of thiols like glutathione (GSH) or cysteine (Cys) may regulate the conversion of dopaquinone to phaeomelanin in hair follicle melanocytes. GSH also plays important roles in cellular health and maintenance. Cys and GSH were measured using high-performance liquid chromatography in hair follicles and serum of A wJ/A wJ (agouti), A y/a (yellow), and a/a (black) mice over a 20-d hair growth regeneration period. Agouti alleles modulate thiol concentrations. A y/a hair follicles exhibited higher total thiol levels and an increased ratio of Cys to GSH. A wJ/A wJ mice showed intermediate levels, while a/a mice had lowest total thiol concentrations and a decreased ratio of Cys to GSH. Hair follicle cysteine concentrations showed yellow > agouti > black (p < 0.01). In all genotypes, unplucked skin and day 0 hair follicles showed GSH as the major thiol, but a shift to predominantly Cys on peak melanogenic days was seen. Presence of high concentrations of free cysteine support the hypothesis of phaeomelanin synthesis via cysteinyldopas. The A y/a mouse had the most dramatic follicular thiol changes as well as a depression in serum thiols. An altered thiol metabolism in these and other A y/a tissues might impair normal cell functioning to contribute to the lethal yellow syndrome.
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PMID:Agouti alleles alter cysteine and glutathione concentrations in hair follicles and serum of mice (A y/a, A wJ/A wJ, and a/a). 864 94

A marked age-related decrease in glutathione (GSH) levels as well as depression of gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase activity are factors that are believed to render the aged lens more susceptible to oxidative stress and, therefore, to cataractogenesis. Providing gamma-L-glutamyl-L-cysteine, the dipeptide precursor of GSH, would effectively bypass the compromised first step in its biosynthesis and should protect the lens from GSH depletion. Accordingly, some bioreversible sulfhydryl-, amino-, and C-terminal carboxyl-protected prodrug forms of this dipeptide were prepared. Sulfhydryl protection was in the form of an acetyl thioester, while the carboxyl group was protected as the ethyl ester. These prodrugs were evaluated for their GSH-enhancing activity in cultured human and rat lenses in vitro using an assay that measured the incorporation of [14C]glycine into lens GSH. Ethyl S-acetyl-gamma-L-glutamyl-L-cysteinate (2) raised GSH levels in human lenses by 25% and in rat lenses by >150%. These data suggest that 2 may have potential as an anticataract agent since ethyl gamma-L-glutamyl-L-cysteinate (1a), the des-S-acetyl analog of 2, had been shown (by others) to protect against experimental rodent cataracts. GSH augmentation by 1a was 2% in human lenses and 25% in rat lenses, considerably less than that shown by 2.
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PMID:Augmentation of human and rat lenticular glutathione in vitro by prodrugs of gamma-L-glutamyl-L-cysteine. 864 7

Non-protein thiols (NP-SH) and the activities of the glutathione status-regulating enzymes gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase (G-GCS), gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (G-GT) and glutathione reductase (GR) were assessed in perfused rabbit hearts subjected to severe (60 min) or mild (7 min) total ischemia and 30 min reperfusion. Severe ischemia significantly decreased NP-SH, which were further depressed on reperfusion together with a significant decline in G-GCS activity; G-GT and GR activities were unchanged. Specific analytes were unaffected by mild ischemia-reperfusion. Thus, impaired enzymatic biosynthesis of GSH is operative in the reperfused rabbit myocardium after 60 min ischemia. This phenomenon may favour myocardial GSH depression and oxidative reperfusion injury after severe ischemia.
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PMID:Impaired glutathione biosynthesis in the ischemic-reperfused rabbit myocardium. 870 34

The influence of UVA and UVB irradiation of the skin for 1, 2 and 4 weeks on the activities of the hepatic and cutaneous P450 isoenzymes was investigated in female Wistar rats before and after systemic administration of hexachlorobenzene (HCB), a well-known porphyrogenic agent, which additionally induces P450 1A1 and P450 1A2 isoenzymes. UVA and UVB irradiation of the skin of controls and HCB-treated animals did not influence porphyrin metabolism. In the nonporphyric rats hepatic EROD (P450 1A1) activity was induced by UVB, but the activity of ADM (P450 2B) and EMDM (P450 3A) was either minimally or not affected. In the HCB-treated (porphyric) rats UVA and UVB irradiation resulted in a significant depression of HCB-induced EROD in the liver and in the skin. In both the nonporphyric and the porphyric rats UVA and UVB irradiation had no effect on hepatic ADM activity. In the liver of the nonporphyric animals EMDM activity remained unchanged after UVA and UVB irradiation, whereas in the HCB-treated animals the activity of this enzyme was increased. Finally, after UVA and UVB irradiation cutaneous EMDM activity was increased in the controls, whereas the HCB-induced increase of this enzyme in porphyric animals was decreased. In addition long-term (28 days) UVB irradiation decreased hepatic GSH content significantly in normal and porphyric rats. These experimental findings cannot be directly extrapolated to humans; however, they suggest that exposure of human skin to UV radiation may result in alterations in the activity of cutaneous hepatic and other extracutaneous P450 isoenzymes.
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PMID:Influence of UVA and UVB irradiation on hepatic and cutaneous P450 isoenzymes. 901 35

The combined effects of ethanol (EtOH) and cigarette smoke (CS) on hepatic and pulmonary monooxygenase (MO) activities (aniline 4-hydroxylase (AH), aminopyrine N-demethylase (AMND), 7-ethoxyresorufin O-deethylase (EROD), p-nitroanisole O-demethylase (p-NAOD)), lipid peroxidation (LP) and reduced glutathione (GSH) levels and glutathione S-transferase (GST) activities toward several substrates (l-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB), 1,2-dichloro-4-nitrobenzene (DCNB), ethacrynic acid (EAA), 1,2-epoxy-3-(p-nitrophenoxy)-propane (ENPP)) were determined and compared with those of EtOH or CS alone in rats. When the male adult rats (225-275 g) were treated with 10% EtOH (v/v) in their drinking for 21 days AH, AMND and EROD activities and LP and GSH levels increased significantly whereas GST activity for EAA decreased significantly in liver as compared to controls. EtOH did not change the hepatic p-NAOD and GST activities toward CDNB, DCNB and ENPP. In lung, EtOH increased GST activities toward CDNB and ENPP and LP level but decreased GST activity toward DCNB, significantly. No alterations were noted in pulmonary MO activities and GST activity toward EAA and GSH level by EtOH treatment. When the animals were exposed to CS five times a day, with 1 h intervals, for 3 days in a chamber where smoke and fresh air lead alternatively, AMND, EROD and p-NAOD activities, GST activity toward EAA and GSH level increased but LP level and GST activity for ENPP decreased significantly in liver. CS did not alter the hepatic AH and GST activities toward CDNB and DCNB. In lung, CS increased AH, EROD and p-NAOD activities and LP and GSH levels and decreased all the GST activities studied significantly. CS had no influence on pulmonary AMND activity. For the combined treatment, the animals were treated with 10% EtOH (v/v) in their drinking water for 21 days and during the last 3 days they were exposed to CS five times a day, with 1 h intervals, in a chamber where smoke and fresh air lead alternatively. In these animals, augmentation of elevations were noted in AH and p-NAOD activities and LP and GSH levels but not in EROD and AMND activities in liver. Combined treatment significantly decreased GST activity toward CDNB, ameliorated the alteration caused by either EtOH or CS treatment alone on GST activity toward EAA and potentiated the depression of GST activity toward ENPP to a greater degree. No change was observed in GST activity toward DCNB. In lung, combined treatment potentiated the elevations of AMND and p-NAOD activities and LP level and not those of AH and EROD activities. GST activities toward CDNB, DCNB and ENPP were highly elevated by the combined treatment. No changes were observed in pulmonary GSH level and GST activity for EAA by the combined treatment. These results reveal that the regulations of the hepatic and pulmonary MO and GST are differentially influenced by EtOH, CS and the combined treatment.
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PMID:Combined effects of ethanol and cigarette smoke on hepatic and pulmonary xenobiotic metabolizing enzymes in rats. 902 Nov 68

Reactive oxygen species may be involved in a broad pattern of tissue injury in patients on regular hemodialysis therapy and, in fact, increasing evidence suggests that the antioxidative system is compromized in these patients. One factor contributing to this reduction of antioxidative capacity is selenium deficiency. The present investigation was undertaken to further define the extent and type of impairment of the oxygen radical scavenger system in chronic hemodialysis patients and to evaluate the impact of selenium supplementation. Twelve non-wasted patients (6 male, 6 female, mean age of 58 years) on chronic hemodialysis for a minimum of 5 months (mean 46 months) were supplemented intravenously with 400 mg selenium (as sodium selenite) thrice weekly after each hemodialysis session over 8 weeks. Blood samples were taken before the start, at intervals of 2 weeks during, and 4 weeks after termination of supplementation. Concentrations were evaluated of selenium and alpha-tocopherol in plasma and erythrocytes, of retinol and ascorbic acid in plasma, of glutathione and the activities of glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px), superoxide dismutase (SOD) and, catalase (CAT) in erythrocytes. Lipid peroxidation endproducts were measured as malondialdehyde (MDA) in plasma. In patients on hemodialysis multiple alterations of the antioxidative system were present and the concentrations of selenium in plasma, of glutathione and the activity of GSH-Px in erythrocytes were profoundly decreased (p < 0.001). Selenium supplementation improved the selenium status of the patients, as indicated by an increase in selenium concentrations in plasma and erythrocytes and erythrocyte GSH-Px activity. Improvement in antioxidative capacity was further documented by an increase in alpha-tocopherol in erythrocytes. Plasma MDA showed a transient decrease after 6 weeks and increased activities of SOD and CAT were dampened. No effect was seen on plasma concentrations of ascorbic acid, a-tocopherol and retinol. We conclude that patients on chronic hemodialysis therapy manifest a profound depression in antioxidative potential and a selenium deficiency. Selenium supplementation improves the oxygen radical scavenger system and increases selenium concentrations in plasma and erythrocytes and the activity of selenium dependent glutathione peroxidase. Thus, selenium should also be considered for micronutrient supplementation in patients on chronic hemodialysis therapy.
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PMID:Antioxidant status in patients on chronic hemodialysis therapy: impact of parenteral selenium supplementation. 931 Nov 3


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