PARADOXICAL EFFECTS OF COBALTOUS CHLORIDE AND SALTS OF OTHER DIVALENT METALS ON TISSUE LEVELS OF REDUCED GLUTATHIONE AND MICROSOMAL MIXED-FUNCTION OXIDASE COMPONENTS
- 1 January 1978
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 205 (3), 718-724
Abstract
Treatment of animals with cobaltous chloride caused decreases in hepatic, pulmonary and renal cytochrome P-450, and alterations in levels of other components of microsomal mixed-function oxidases, which can alter the rate of biotransformation of certain drug substrates. The treatment also caused a striking, dose-dependent elevation in tissue levels of reduced glutathione (GSH), within 2-8 h. The effect of Co on GSH occurred in all tested animal species and strains. Actinomycin D partially prevented the Co-stimulated rise in hepatic GSH. Salts of several other divalent metals also produced sharply elevated levels of hepatic GSH, occurring concomitantly with decreased microsomal content of cytochrome P-450. These results suggest that pretreatment of animals with cobaltous chloride, or other divalent metal salts, could alter the disposition of certain toxic, alkylating drug metabolites not only by decreasing the rate of formation of the reactive metabolites, but also by increasing the amount of GSH available for the formation of their less reactive, less toxic, GSH conjugates.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cobalt regulation of heme synthesis and degradation in avian embryo liver cell culture.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1977
- Effect of cobalt on synthesis of heme and cytochrome P-450 in the liver. Studies of adult rat hepatocytes in primary monolayer culture and in vivo.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1976
- CARBON MONOXIDE-BINDING PIGMENT OF LIVER MICROSOMES .I. EVIDENCE FOR ITS HEMOPROTEIN NATURE1964
- Microsomal Triphosphopyridine Nucleotide-Cytochrome c Reductase of LiverJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1962