Protective effects of N-acetyl-L-cysteine against acute carbon tetrachloride hepatotoxicity in rats
Autor: | E. Yu. Sudnikovich, E. A. Lapshina, Ilya B. Zavodnik, Yu. Z. Maksimchik, S. V. Zabrodskaya |
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Rok vydání: | 2007 |
Předmět: |
Male
Bilirubin Membrane lipids Clinical Biochemistry CCL4 Pharmacology medicine.disease_cause Biochemistry Nitric oxide chemistry.chemical_compound Blood plasma medicine Animals Humans Rats Wistar Carbon Tetrachloride chemistry.chemical_classification Carbon Tetrachloride Poisoning Free Radical Scavengers Cell Biology General Medicine Acetylcysteine Rats Oxidative Stress Liver chemistry Acute Disease Carbon tetrachloride Thiol Oxidative stress |
Zdroj: | Cell Biochemistry and Function. 26:11-18 |
ISSN: | 1099-0844 0263-6484 |
DOI: | 10.1002/cbf.1382 |
Popis: | In recent years, N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC) has been widely investigated as a potentially useful protective and antioxidative agent to be applied in many pathological states. The aim of the present work was further evaluation of the mechanisms of the NAC protective effect under carbon tetrachloride-induced acute liver injuries in rats. The rat treatment with CCl4 (4 g/kg, intragastrically) caused pronounced hepatolysis observed as an increase in blood plasma bilirubin levels and hepatic enzyme activities, which agreed with numerous previous observations. The rat intoxication was accompanied by an enhancement of membrane lipid peroxidation (1.4-fold) and protein oxidative damage (protein carbonyl group and mixed protein-glutathione disulphide formations) in the rat liver. The levels of nitric oxide in blood plasma and liver tissue significantly increased (5.3- and 1.5-fold, respectively) as blood plasma triacylglycerols decreased (1.6-fold). The NAC administration to control and intoxicated animals (three times at doses of 150 mg/kg) elevated low-molecular-weight thiols in the liver. The NAC administration under CCl4-induced intoxication prevented oxidative damage of liver cells, decreased membrane lipid peroxidation, protein carbonyls and mixed protein-glutathione disulphides formation, and partially normalized plasma triacylglycerols. At the same time the NAC treatment of intoxicated animals did not produce a marked decrease of the elevated levels of blood plasma ALT and AST activities and bilirubin. The in vitro exposure of human red blood cells to NAC increased the cellular low-molecular-weight thiol levels and retarded tert-butylhydroperoxide-induced cellular thiol depletion and membrane lipid peroxidation as well as effectively inhibited hypochlorous acid-induced erythrocyte lysis. Thus, NAC can replenish non-protein cellular thiols and protect membrane lipids and proteins due to its direct radical-scavenging properties, but it did not attenuate hepatotoxicity in the acute rat CCl4-intoxication model. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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