Back to Search Start Over

Iron-induced changes in nitric oxide and superoxide radical generation in rat liver after lindane or thyroid hormone treatment.

Authors :
Cornejo P
Tapia G
Puntarulo S
Galleano M
Videla LA
Fernández V
Source :
Toxicology letters [Toxicol Lett] 2001 Feb 28; Vol. 119 (2), pp. 87-93.
Publication Year :
2001

Abstract

The involvement of cytosolic nitric oxide (NO) and mitochondrial superoxide radical (O2(.-)) production was evaluated as a mechanism triggering liver oxidative stress in lindane (40 mg/kg) or L-3,3',5-triiodothyronine (T3, 0.1 mg/kg for 2 consecutive days) treated animals (male Sprague-Dawley rats) subjected to iron overload (200 mg/kg). Lindane and iron led to 504 and 210% increases in the content of hepatic protein carbonyls as an index of oxidative stress, with a 706% enhancement being produced by their combined administration. T3 did not alter this parameter, whereas iron overload increased the content of protein carbonyls by 116% in hyperthyroid rats. Lindane increased NO generation by 106% without changes in generation of O2(.-), whereas iron enhanced both parameters by 109 and 80% over control values, respectively, with a net 33 and 46% decrease, respectively, being elicited by the combined treatment related to iron overload alone. Hyperthyroidism increased liver NO (69%) and O2(.-) (110%) generation compared to controls, effects that were either synergistically augmented or suppressed by iron overload, respectively. The in vitro addition of iron (1 micromol/mg protein) to liver cytosolic fractions from euthyroid (97%) and hyperthyroid (173%) rats also enhanced NO generation. The effects of iron overload on mitochondrial O2(.-) production by hyperthyroid rats were reproduced by the in vitro addition of 1 micromol iron/mg protein and abolished by the in vivo pretreatment with the iron chelator desferrioxamine (500 mg/kg). It is concluded that liver oxidative stress induced by iron overload is independent of NO and O2(.-) production in lindane-treated rats, whereas in hyperthyroid animals NO generation is a major factor contributing to this redox imbalance.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0378-4274
Volume :
119
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Toxicology letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
11311569
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/s0378-4274(00)00295-2