| Literature DB >> 27993098 |
András Szabó1,2, Judit Szabó-Fodor2, Hedvig Fébel3, Miklós Mézes4, Imre Repa1, Melinda Kovács2.
Abstract
Adult male Wistar rats were enrolled in a study to test the acute hepatic effects of 50 mg/kg fumonisin B1 in feed for 5 days. Fumonisin B1 depressed growth and feed intake, and absolute and relative liver weight showed a significant increase. The proportions of C17:0, C18:3 n3, C22:5 n3 and C22:6 n3 fatty acids decreased in the hepatic phospholipid fraction. All proportional decreases modified the hepatocellular membrane lipids into a more rigid state. The fatty acid profile modifications were partly compensated for by endogenous glutathione (preventing the formation of conjugated dienes and trienes as initial phase lipid peroxidation indicators), while the enzymatic antioxidant defence system (glutathione peroxidase) was unaltered. In contrast, hepatic malondialdehyde, the cytotoxic product of end-phase lipid peroxidation showed a concentration increase even after 5 days of feeding. The results indicate a rather strong and rapid hepatic effect of FB1, immediately impairing membrane phospholipids, even before the enzymatic antioxidant defence is activated.Entities:
Keywords: Fumonisin B1; antioxidants; fatty acids; hepatocellular membrane; oxidative stress; rat
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27993098 DOI: 10.1556/004.2016.041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Vet Hung ISSN: 0236-6290 Impact factor: 0.955