Literature DB >> 8884872

Effect of mercuric chloride intoxication and dimercaprol treatment on delta-aminolevulinate dehydratase from brain, liver and kidney of adult mice.

T Emanuelli1, J B Rocha, M E Pereira, L O Porciuncula, V M Morsch, A F Martins, D O Souza.   

Abstract

Dimercaprol is a compound used in the treatment of mercury intoxication, however with low therapeutic efficacy. It is assumed that dimercaprol acts by reactivating target sulfhydryl-containing proteins. In the present investigation we studied the inhibitory effect of mercuric chloride treatment (3 days with 2.3 or 4.6 mg/kg HgCl2, sc) in mice on cerebral, renal and hepatic delta-aminolevulinate dehydratase (ALA-D) activity, and a possible reversal of the effect of mercury by dimercaprol (0.25 mmol/kg, 24 hr after the last mercury injection). Mercuric chloride did not inhibit cerebral ALA-D at the doses injected. Dimercaprol treatment did not restore the normal enzyme activity of the liver after the 25% inhibition caused by 4.6 mg/kg HgCl2. In the kidney, dimercaprol enhanced the inhibitory effect of 4.6 mg/kg mercuric chloride (from 35% after mercury treatment alone to 65% after mercury plus dimercaprol treatment). Mercury content increased in kidney after exposure to 2.3 or 4.6 mg/kg and the levels attained were higher than in any other organ Mercury accumulated in liver only after exposure to 4.6 mg/kg HgCl2, and dimercaprol further increased mercury deposition. Dimercaprol treatment also increased the levels of mercury in brain of animals exposed to 4.6 mg/kg HgCl2 The enzymes from all sources presented similar sensitivity to the combined effect of HgCl2 and dimercaprol in vitro. In the absence of preincubation, 0-500 muM dimercaprol potentiated the inhibitory effect of HgCl2 on ALA-D activity. In the presence of preincubation, and 100 and 250 muM dimercaprol enhanced ALA-D sensitivity to mercury, whereas 500 muM dimercaprol partially protected the enzyme from mercury inhibition. Dimercaprol (500 muM) inhibited renal and hepatic ALA-D when preincubated with the enzymes. These data suggested that the dimercaprol-Hg complex may have a more toxic effect on ALA-D activity than Hg2+. Furthermore, the present data show that dimercaprol did not acts by reactivating mercury-inhibited sulfhydryl-containing ALA-D, and that indeed it may have an inhibitory effect per se depending on the tissue.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8884872     DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0773.1996.tb00257.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pharmacol Toxicol        ISSN: 0901-9928


  12 in total

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10.  Gender related differences in kidney injury induced by mercury.

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