scholarly journals Lipid peroxidation and haemoglobin degradation in red blood cells exposed to t-butyl hydroperoxide. The relative roles of haem- and glutathione-dependent decomposition of t-butyl hydroperoxide and membrane lipid hydroperoxides in lipid peroxidation and haemolysis

1983 ◽  
Vol 212 (3) ◽  
pp. 759-772 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert J. Trotta ◽  
Stephen Gene Sullivan ◽  
Arnold Stern

Red cells exposed to t-butyl hydroperoxide undergo lipid peroxidation, haemoglobin degradation and hexose monophosphate-shunt stimulation. By using the lipid-soluble antioxidant 2,6-di-t-butyl-p-cresol, the relative contributions of t-butyl hydroperoxide and membrane lipid hydroperoxides to oxidative haemoglobin changes and hexose monophosphate-shunt stimulation were determined. About 90% of the haemoglobin changes and all of the hexose monophosphate-shunt stimulation were caused by t-butyl hydroperoxide. The remainder of the haemoglobin changes appeared to be due to reactions between haemoglobin and lipid hydroperoxides generated during membrane peroxidation. After exposure of red cells to t-butyl hydroperoxide, no lipid hydroperoxides were detected iodimetrically, whether or not glucose was present in the incubation. Concentrations of 2,6-di-t-butyl-p-cresol, which almost totally suppressed lipid peroxidation, significantly inhibited haemoglobin binding to the membrane but had no significant effect on hexose monophosphate shunt stimulation, suggesting that lipid hydroperoxides had been decomposed by a reaction with haem or haem-protein and not enzymically via glutathione peroxidase. The mechanisms of lipid peroxidation and haemoglobin oxidation and the protective role of glucose were also investigated. In time-course studies of red cells containing oxyhaemoglobin, methaemoglobin or carbonmono-oxyhaemoglobin incubated without glucose and exposed to t-butyl hydroperoxide, haemoglobin oxidation paralleled both lipid peroxidation and t-butyl hydroperoxide consumption. Lipid peroxidation ceased when all t-butyl hydroperoxide was consumed, indicating that it was not autocatalytic and was driven by initiation events followed by rapid propagation and termination of chain reactions and rapid non-enzymic decomposition of lipid hydroperoxides. Carbonmono-oxyhaemoglobin and oxyhaemoglobin were good promoters of peroxidation, whereas methaemoglobin relatively spared the membrane from peroxidation. The protective influence of glucose metabolism on the time course of t-butyl hydroperoxide-induced changes was greatest in carbonmono-oxyhaemoglobin-containing red cells followed in order by oxyhaemoglobin- and methaemoglobin-containing red cells. This is the reverse order of the reactivity of the hydroperoxide with haemoglobin, which is greatest with methaemoglobin. In studies exposing red cells to a wide range of t-butyl hydroperoxide concentrations, haemoglobin oxidation and lipid peroxidation did not occur until the cellular glutathione had been oxidized. The amount of lipid peroxidation per increment in added t-butyl hydroperoxide was greatest in red cells containing carbonmono-oxyhaemoglobin, followed in order by oxyhaemoglobin and methaemoglobin. Red cells containing oxyhaemoglobin and carbonmono-oxyhaemoglobin and exposed to increasing concentrations of t-butyl hydroperoxide became increasingly resistant to lipid peroxidation as methaemoglobin accumulated, supporting a relatively protective role for methaemoglobin. In the presence of glucose, higher levels of t-butyl hydroperoxide were required to induce lipid peroxidation and haemoglobin oxidation compared with incubations without glucose. Carbonmono-oxyhaemoglobin-containing red cells exposed to the highest levels of t-butyl hydroperoxide underwent haemolysis after a critical level of lipid peroxidation was reached. Inhibition of lipid peroxidation by 2,6-di-t-butyl-p-cresol below this critical level prevented haemolysis. Oxidative membrane damage appeared to be a more important determinant of haemolysis in vitro than haemoglobin degradation. The effects of various antioxidants and free-radical scavengers on lipid peroxidation in red cells or in ghosts plus methaemoglobin exposed to t-butyl hydroperoxide suggested that red-cell haemoglobin decomposed the hydroperoxide by a homolytic scission mechanism to t-butoxyl radicals.

1982 ◽  
Vol 204 (2) ◽  
pp. 405-415 ◽  
Author(s):  
R J Trotta ◽  
S G Sullivan ◽  
A Stern

Lipid peroxidation and haemoglobin degradation were the two extremes of a spectrum of oxidative damage in red cells exposed to t-butyl hydroperoxide. The exact position in this spectrum depended on the availability of glucose and the ligand state of haemoglobin. In red cells containing oxy- or carbonmono-oxy-haemoglobin, hexose monophosphate-shunt activity was mainly responsible for metabolism of t-butyl hydroperoxide; haem groups were the main scavengers in red cells containing methaemoglobin. Glutathione, via glutathione peroxidase, accounted for nearly all of the hydroperoxide metabolizing activity of the hexose monophosphate shunt. Glucose protection against lipid peroxidation was almost entirely mediated by glutathione, whereas glucose protection of haemoglobin was only partly mediated by glutathione. Physiological concentrations of intracellular or extracellular ascorbate had no effect on consumption of t-butyl hydroperoxide or oxidation of haemoglobin. Ascorbate was mainly involved in scavenging chain-propagating species involved in lipid peroxidation. The protective effect of intracellular ascorbate against lipid peroxidation was about 100% glucose-dependent and about 50% glutathione-dependent. Extracellular ascorbate functioned largely without a requirement for glucose metabolism, although some synergistic effects between extracellular ascorbate and glutathione were observed. Lipid peroxidation was not dependent on the rate or completion of t-butyl hydroperoxide consumption but rather on the route of consumption. Lipid peroxidation appears to depend on the balance between the presence of initiators of lipid peroxidation (oxyhaemoglobin and low concentrations of methaemoglobin) and terminators of lipid peroxidation (glutathione, ascorbate, high concentrations of methaemoglobin).


Blood ◽  
1975 ◽  
Vol 45 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-54 ◽  
Author(s):  
AL Jr Sagone ◽  
SP Balcerzak ◽  
EN Metz

Abstract In this investigation, we studied the importance of cellular glutathione (GSH) in the hexose monophosphate shunt (HMPS) activity of unstimulated human erythrocytes and the mechanism by which pyruvate stimulates the HMPS. The rate of HMPS activity was measured by the production of radioactive CO2 from 14C-1-glucose or 14C-1-ribose using a vibrating reed electrometer and ionization chamber. HMPS activity was not significantly impaired by N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) in concentrations which bound all red cell GSH. Red cells incubated under carbon monoxide (CO), an experimental condition which eliminates peroxide production, still had HMPS activity which was 44% of the value under air. Pyruvate stimulation of the HMPS was unaffected by doses of NEM which bound all cellular GSH or by incubation under CO. These data indicated that pyruvate stimulation of the HMPS occurs by pathways which do not involve peroxide formation, GSH, or oxygen. This study indicates that sulfhydrylblockade of GSH does not necessarily inhibit HMPS activity and that HMPS activity in red cells may respond to reactions not linked directly to glutathione reduction.


1971 ◽  
Vol 179 (1 Drug Metaboli) ◽  
pp. 625-635 ◽  
Author(s):  
Selman I. Welt ◽  
Elizabeth H. Jackson ◽  
Henry N. Kirkman ◽  
John C. Parker

Blood ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 47 (4) ◽  
pp. 545-554 ◽  
Author(s):  
LR DeChatelet ◽  
PS Shirley ◽  
RB Jr Johnston

The addition of 0.1 mug/ml of phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) to a suspension of resting human neutrophils causes a marked stimulation of all aspects of cellular oxidative metabolism normally associated with phagocytosis. PMA induces a greatly increased rate of glucose oxidation via the hexose monophosphate shunt, increased production of superoxide anion and of hydrogen peroxide, increased cellular chemiluminescence, and increased iodination of protein material. The time course of hexose monophosphate shunt activation and of chemiluminescence are similar to those observed following phagocytosis of opsonized zymosan; the levels of activation achieved in all cases approximate those seen following phagocytosis. These phenomena are not simply reflections of altered cellular permeability, since PMA actually inhibits the uptake of radioactive 2-deoxyglucose and of uniformly labeled amino acids. The addition of PMA similarly inhibits the uptake of 14C-labeled bacteria, suggesting a competition between the effect of the chemical and the process of phagocytosis. These results suggest that PMA activates the cell in the same manner as does phagocytosis. This compound should provide a useful tool for elucidating the metabolic events underlying the phenomena of phagocytosis and bacterial killing by polymorphonuclear leukocytes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoning Li ◽  
Chuncheng Zhao ◽  
Ting Zhang ◽  
Guangyang Wang ◽  
Erick Amombo ◽  
...  

Perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne) is a cool-season grass whose growth and development are limited by drought and high temperature. Aspergillus aculeatus has been reported to promote plant growth and counteract the adverse effects of abiotic stresses. The objective of this study was to assess A. aculeatus-induced response mechanisms to drought and heat resistance in perennial ryegrass. We evaluated the physiological and biochemical markers of drought and heat stress based on the hormone homeostasis, photosynthesis, antioxidant enzymes activity, lipid peroxidation, and genes expression level. We found out that under drought and heat stress, A. aculeatus-inoculated leaves exhibited higher abscisic acid (ABA) and lower salicylic acid (SA) contents than non-inoculated regimes. In addition, under drought and heat stress, the fungus enhanced the photosynthetic performance, decreased the antioxidase activities, and mitigated membrane lipid peroxidation compared to non-inoculated regime. Furthermore, under drought stress, A. aculeatus induced a dramatic upregulation of sHSP17.8 and DREB1A and a downregulation of POD47, Cu/ZnSOD, and FeSOD genes. In addition, under heat stress, A. aculeatus-inoculated plants exhibited a higher expression level of HSP26.7a, sHSP17.8, and DREB1A while a lower expression level of POD47 and FeSOD than non-inoculated ones. Our results provide an evidence of the protective role of A. aculeatus in perennial ryegrass response to drought and heat stresses.


Antioxidants ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 43
Author(s):  
Jessica L. H. Walters ◽  
Amanda L. Anderson ◽  
Sarah J. Martins da Silva ◽  
R. John Aitken ◽  
Geoffry N. De Iuliis ◽  
...  

A prevalent cause of sperm dysfunction in male infertility patients is the overproduction of reactive oxygen species, an attendant increase in lipid peroxidation and the production of cytotoxic reactive carbonyl species such as 4-hydroxynonenal. Our previous studies have implicated arachidonate 15-lipoxygenase (ALOX15) in the production of 4-hydroxynonenal in developing germ cells. Here, we have aimed to develop a further mechanistic understanding of the lipoxygenase-lipid peroxidation pathway in human spermatozoa. Through pharmacological inhibition studies, we identified a protective role for phospholipase enzymes in the liberation of peroxidised polyunsaturated fatty acids from the human sperm membrane. Our results also revealed that arachidonic acid, linoleic acid and docosahexanoic acid are key polyunsaturated fatty acid substrates for ALOX15. Upon examination of ALOX15 in the spermatozoa of infertile patients compared to their normozoospermic counterparts, we observed significantly elevated levels of ALOX15 protein abundance in the infertile population and an increase in 4-hydroxynonenal adducts. Collectively, these data confirm the involvement of ALOX15 in the oxidative stress cascade of human spermatozoa and support the notion that increased ALOX15 abundance in sperm cells may accentuate membrane lipid peroxidation and cellular dysfunction, ultimately contributing to male infertility.


Blood ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 47 (4) ◽  
pp. 545-554 ◽  
Author(s):  
LR DeChatelet ◽  
PS Shirley ◽  
RB Jr Johnston

Abstract The addition of 0.1 mug/ml of phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) to a suspension of resting human neutrophils causes a marked stimulation of all aspects of cellular oxidative metabolism normally associated with phagocytosis. PMA induces a greatly increased rate of glucose oxidation via the hexose monophosphate shunt, increased production of superoxide anion and of hydrogen peroxide, increased cellular chemiluminescence, and increased iodination of protein material. The time course of hexose monophosphate shunt activation and of chemiluminescence are similar to those observed following phagocytosis of opsonized zymosan; the levels of activation achieved in all cases approximate those seen following phagocytosis. These phenomena are not simply reflections of altered cellular permeability, since PMA actually inhibits the uptake of radioactive 2-deoxyglucose and of uniformly labeled amino acids. The addition of PMA similarly inhibits the uptake of 14C-labeled bacteria, suggesting a competition between the effect of the chemical and the process of phagocytosis. These results suggest that PMA activates the cell in the same manner as does phagocytosis. This compound should provide a useful tool for elucidating the metabolic events underlying the phenomena of phagocytosis and bacterial killing by polymorphonuclear leukocytes.


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