Abstract

In the present investigation we found that lung Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity (units/mg of DNA) increases steadily in the rat from birth to adulthood. The specific activity (units/micrograms of enzyme) of Cu,Zn-SOD was unchanged from birth to adulthood, excluding enzyme activation as a mechanism responsible for the increase in enzyme activity. Lung synthesis of Cu,Zn-SOD peaked at 1 day before birth and decreased thereafter to adult values. Calculations, based on rates of Cu,Zn-SOD synthesis and the tissue content of the enzyme, indicated that lung Cu,Zn-SOD activity increased during development owing to the rate of enzyme synthesis exceeding its rate of degradation by 5-10%. These calculations were supported by measurements of enzyme degradation in the neonatal (half-life, t1/2, = 12 h) and adult lung (t1/2 = greater than 100 h); the difference in half-life did not reflect the rates of overall protein degradation in the lung, since these rates were not different in lungs from neonatal and adult rats. We did not detect differences in the Mr or pI of Cu,Zn-SOD during development, but the susceptibility of the enzyme to inactivation by heat or copper chelation decreased with increasing age of the rats. We conclude that the progressive increase in activity of Cu,Zn-SOD is due to a rate of synthesis that exceeds degradation of the enzyme. The data also suggest that increased stabilization of enzyme conformation accounts for the greater half-life of the enzyme in lungs of adult compared with neonatal rats.

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