Literature DB >> 2711024

Prevention of oxidative injury to cardiac phospholipid by membrane-active "stabilizing agents".

D R Janero1, B Burghardt.   

Abstract

Three lipophilic, membrane-active "stabilizing agents," cepharanthine, chlorpromazine, and trifluoperazine, were found to protect myocardial membrane phospholipid from peroxidative injury. The compounds prevented, in a concentration-dependent manner, the cardiac phospholipid peroxidation which resulted from lipid exposure to superoxide-dependent, iron-promoted oxygen-radical chemistry of the type thought to be a causative factor in ischemic-reperfusion tissue damage. Chlorpromazine's antiperoxidant IC50 (i.e., concentration at which peroxidation was inhibited by 50%) was 180 microM; the antiperoxidant potencies of cepharanthine (IC50 = 90 microM) and trifluoperazine (IC 50 = 100 microM) were some two-fold greater. These agents, at effective antiperoxidant concentrations, did not inhibit the enzymatic superoxide source, xanthine oxidase, scavenge superoxide radical, or act like a chain-breaking antioxidant. The data raise a possibility that the these three membrane-active compounds, as lipophilic anesthetics, may exert antiperoxidant effects by inducing structural changes in the lipid-rich (membrane or liposome) target of free radical attack.

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Year:  1989        PMID: 2711024

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Res Commun Chem Pathol Pharmacol        ISSN: 0034-5164


  1 in total

1.  Protective effect of safranine on the mitochondrial damage induced by Fe(II)citrate: comparative study with trifluoperazine.

Authors:  R F Castilho; R S Pereira; A E Vercesi
Journal:  Eur J Drug Metab Pharmacokinet       Date:  1996 Jan-Mar       Impact factor: 2.441

  1 in total

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