Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P04040 (Catalase)
3,577 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pretreatment with zinc produces tolerance to several cadmium toxic effects. This study was performed to further elucidate the mechanism of zinc-induced tolerance to cadmium cytotoxicity in a rat hepatic stellate cell line (CFSC-2G). Twenty four hours after seeding, cells were treated with 60 micromol/L ZnCl2 for 24 h. Following zinc pretreatment, cells were exposed to 3 micromol/L and 5 micromol/L CdCl2 for an additional 24 h. The toxicity of cadmium was significantly reduced in the zinc-pretreated cells. Zinc pretreatment produced a decrease in lipid peroxidation damage of cadmium-treated cells. Glutathione cell content diminished 33% and 43% as a result of 3 micromol/L and 5 micromol/ L CdCl2 treatment, respectively. Cell pretreatment with zinc recovered glutathione content at control cells level. Catalase and glutathione peroxidase activities were also recovered to control values with zinc pretreatment. Cadmium (5 micromol/L) was able to induce 39% the expression of alpha1 collagen (I) gene after 1 h treatment, while zinc pretreatment prevented this cadmium profibrogenic effect. We also examined the production of heat shock protein 70 (Hsp70) as a cellular response to oxidative stress produced by cadmium. By Western blot analysis, a 1.3 and 3 times increment in Hsp70, with 3 micromol/L and 5 micromol/L CdCl2 treatment, respectively, was observed. Zinc pretreatment prevented the production of Hsp70. Metallothionein-II (MT-II) gene expression was induced by cadmium, but the induction was unaffected with zinc pretreatment. These data suggest that zinc-induced protection against the cytotoxicity of cadmium in stellate cells may be related to the maintenance of normal redox balance inside the cell.
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PMID:Zinc pretreatment prevents hepatic stellate cells from cadmium-produced oxidative damage. 1549 71

We show that HTLV-1 negative leukemia cells are more sensitive to TQ due to higher levels of drug-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS). PreG1 population in HTLV-1 negative Jurkat and CEM was higher than HTLV-1 transformed HuT-102 and MT-2 cells. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells were more resistant. Hoechst staining indicated more features of apoptosis, namely nuclear blebs and shrunken nuclei in HuT-102 than Jurkat. A greater depletion of the antioxidant enzyme glutathione occurred in Jurkat, which consequently led to an increase in ROS, loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, cytochrome c release, activation of caspases 3 and 9, and cleavage of PARP. Treatment with z-VAD-fmk partially reversed TQ-induced apoptosis, suggesting a caspase-dependent mechanism. N-acetyl cysteine prevented apoptosis providing evidence that cell death is ROS-dependent. Catalase prevented apoptosis to a lesser extent than NAC. In summary, TQ induces apoptosis in adult T cell leukemia/lymphoma by decreasing glutathione and increasing ROS, and levels of ROS underlie the differential cellular response to TQ. Our data suggest a potential therapeutic role for TQ in sensitizing HTLV-I-negative T-cell lymphomas.
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PMID:Thymoquinone induces apoptosis in malignant T-cells via generation of ROS. 2327 25