Literature DB >> 12084614

Acetaminophen-induced suppression of hepatic AdoMet synthetase activity is attenuated by prodrugs of L-cysteine.

Frances N Shirota1, Eugene G DeMaster, Don W Shoeman, Herbert T Nagasawa.   

Abstract

Administration of acetaminophen (ACP, 400 mg/kg, i.p.) to fasted, male Swiss-Webster mice caused a rapid 90% decrease in total hepatic glutathione (GSH) and a 58% decrease in mitochondrial GSH by 2 h post ACP. This was followed by a time-dependent decrease (72%) in hepatic AdoMet synthetase activity and rise in plasma ALT levels (>10000 U/l) at 24 h post ACP treatment. AdoMet synthetase activity was maintained at 82, 78 and 60% of controls, respectively, by the cysteine prodrugs PTCA, CySSME and NAC. Total hepatic and mitochondrial GSH levels were also protected from severe ACP-induced depletion by CySSME and MTCA. These results suggest that the maintenance of GSH homeostasis by cysteine prodrugs can protect mouse hepatic AdoMet synthetase, a sulfhydryl enzyme whose integrity is dependent on GSH, as well as the liver itself from the consequences of oxidative stress elicited by toxic metabolites of xenobiotics.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12084614     DOI: 10.1016/s0378-4274(01)00549-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Toxicol Lett        ISSN: 0378-4274            Impact factor:   4.372


  1 in total

1.  Combined histomorphometric and gene-expression profiling applied to toxicology.

Authors:  Andres Kriete; Mary K Anderson; Brad Love; John Freund; James J Caffrey; M Brook Young; Timothy J Sendera; Scott R Magnuson; J Mark Braughler
Journal:  Genome Biol       Date:  2003-04-30       Impact factor: 13.583

  1 in total

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