GLUTATHIONE CONJUGATE MEDIATED TOXICITIES

被引:200
作者
MONKS, TJ
ANDERS, MW
DEKANT, W
STEVENS, JL
LAU, SS
VANBLADEREN, PJ
机构
[1] UNIV ROCHESTER,SCH MED & DENT,DEPT PHARMACOL,ROCHESTER,NY 14642
[2] UNIV WURZBURG,INST TOXIKOL,W-8700 WURZBURG,GERMANY
[3] W ALTON JONES CELL SCI CTR,LAKE PLACID,NY 12946
[4] TNO,CIVO,INST TOXICOL & NUTR,DEPT BIOL TOXICOL,3700 AJ ZEIST,NETHERLANDS
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0041-008X(90)90100-9
中图分类号
R9 [药学];
学科分类号
1007 ;
摘要
Glutathione (γ-glutamyl-l-cysteinylglycine; GSH) is present in high concentrations in most living cells and participates in a variety of vital cellular reactions. In particular, GSH protects cells from potentially toxic electrophiles formed via the metabolism of xenobiotics, and such reactions have long been associated with the process of detoxication (Baumann and Preusse. 1879; Jaffe, 1879). Compounds that form GSH conjugates are processed by γ-glutamyl transpeptidase (γ-GT) and dipeptidases to cysteine S-conjugates, which are usually excreted in urine as their corresponding mercapturic acids (S-substituted N-acetyl-l-cysteine conjugates). In addition. GSH peroxidase activity, whether catalyzed by the selenium-dependent GSH peroxidase or by the GSH S-transferases, serves to detoxify hydrogen peroxide and organic hydroperoxides. However, in recent years, evidence indicating that GSH conjugation plays an important role in the formation of toxic metabolites from a variety of chemicals has accumulated. Thus, several classes of compounds are converted, via conjugation with GSH, into either cytotoxic, genotoxic, or mutagenic metabolites. The purposes of the symposium on "Glutathione Conjugate Mediated Toxicities" presented at the 1990 Society of Toxicology Annual Meeting were to discuss recent findings in this rapidly moving field, to present ideas on the mechanisms and modulation of GSH conjugate-dependent toxicities, to present a consensus on the broader significance of this work, and to identify directions for future research. This paper summarizes these presentations. GSH conjugation reactions are involved in the bioactivation of several classes of xenobiotics, and four types of GSH-dependent bioactivation reactions can be identified: (1) directly toxic GSH conjugates may be formed from vicinal dihaloalkanes via formation of electrophilic sulfur mustards: (2) cysteine conjugate β-lyase-dependent bioactivation is involved in the selective nephrotoxicity of haloalkenes; (3) GSH conjugates of hydroquinones and isothiocyanates may serve as transport and targeting metabolites; and (4) GSH-dependent reactions may be involved in the release of toxic agents from precursor organic thiocyanates and nitrosoguanidines (N-methyl-N′-nitro-N-nitrosguanidine). © 1990.
引用
收藏
页码:1 / 19
页数:19
相关论文
共 131 条
[1]   METABOLISM OF DIHALOMETHANES TO FORMALDEHYDE AND INORGANIC HALIDE .2. STUDIES ON MECHANISM OF REACTION [J].
AHMED, AE ;
ANDERS, MW .
BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY, 1978, 27 (16) :2021-2025
[2]   BIOSYNTHESIS AND BIOTRANSFORMATION OF GLUTATHIONE S-CONJUGATES TO TOXIC METABOLITES [J].
ANDERS, MW ;
LASH, L ;
DEKANT, W ;
ELFARRA, AA ;
DOHN, DR .
CRC CRITICAL REVIEWS IN TOXICOLOGY, 1988, 18 (04) :311-341
[3]   PHYSIOLOGICALLY BASED PHARMACOKINETICS AND THE RISK ASSESSMENT PROCESS FOR METHYLENE-CHLORIDE [J].
ANDERSEN, ME ;
CLEWELL, HJ ;
GARGAS, ML ;
SMITH, FA ;
REITZ, RH .
TOXICOLOGY AND APPLIED PHARMACOLOGY, 1987, 87 (02) :185-205
[4]  
BAKKE JE, 1986, XENOBIOTIC CONJUGATI, P301
[5]   INHIBITION OF RAT-KIDNEY MITOCHONDRIAL-DNA, RNA AND PROTEIN-SYNTHESIS BY HALOGENATED CYSTEINE S-CONJUGATES [J].
BANKI, K ;
ANDERS, MW .
CARCINOGENESIS, 1989, 10 (04) :767-772
[6]   AN INVIVO STUDY OF BENZENE METABOLITE DNA ADDUCT FORMATION IN LIVER OF MALE NEW-ZEALAND RABBITS [J].
BAUER, H ;
DIMITRIADIS, EA ;
SNYDER, R .
ARCHIVES OF TOXICOLOGY, 1989, 63 (03) :209-213
[7]  
Bauman E., 1879, BERICHTE DTSCH GESSE, V12, P806
[8]  
BROCK N, 1977, Zeitschrift fuer Krebsforschung und Klinische Onkologie, V88, P185
[9]   GLUTATHIONE-MEDIATED AND CYSTEINE-MEDIATED CYTOTOXICITY OF ALLYL AND BENZYL ISOTHIOCYANATE [J].
BRUGGEMAN, IM ;
TEMMINK, JHM ;
VANBLADEREN, PJ .
TOXICOLOGY AND APPLIED PHARMACOLOGY, 1986, 83 (02) :349-359
[10]  
BRUSEWITZ G, 1977, BIOCHEM J, V162, P99