Abstract

Micro-and macronodular experimental liver cirrhosis was induced in female rats by administration of 0.03% thioacetamide (TAA) in drinking water for 3 or 6 months, respectively. The glutathione (GSH) status (content, synthesis, export) and ultrastructural changes of liver were investigated 14 d after withdrawal of TAA. The hepatic level of GSH was increased after 6 months TAA treatment. The levels of oxidized glutathione (GSSG) were not changed after 3 months or 6 months TAA administration. The GSH synthesis was not disturbed in the cirrhotic livers; only the ratio between the 2 synthesizing enzymes was changed in macronodular liver cirrhosis. The plasma GSH content was reduced in both cases, independent of the stage of liver cirrhosis. The electron microscopic studies on cirrhotic rat livers revealed a series of characteristic structural changes, such as disorganization and total lack of the microvilli border, appearance of basement membrane-like deposits within the narrowed space of Disse, disappearance of the highly porous endothelial cell lining and partly an intensively detoriated blood supply within the pseudolobules. It is suggested that all these changes may contribute to a disturbance of the GSH export from the hepatocytes into the blood. It is very likely, however, that the alterations of the sinusoidal cell surface play the most important role. 1. The GSH/GSSG redox potential is shifted in favour of the reduced form in this cirrhosis model. This shift seems to be connected with later stages of cirrhogenesis. 2. A GSH export disturbance is responsible for the decreased plasma GSH level in liver cirrhosis.

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