Abstract

The production of potent oxygen radicals by microsomal reaction systems has been well characterized. Relatively little attention has been paid to generation of oxygen radicals by liver nuclei, or to the interaction of nuclei with different ferric complexes to catalyze NADH- or NADPH-dependent production of reactive oxygen intermediates. Intact rat liver nuclei were capable of catalyzing an iron-dependent production of .OH as reflected by the oxidation of .OH scavenging agents such as 2-keto-4-thiomethylbutyrate, dimethyl sulfoxide, and t-butyl alcohol. Inhibition of .OH production by catalase implicates H 2O 2 as the precursor of .OH generated by the nuclei, whereas superoxide dismutase had only a partially inhibitory effect. The production of .OH with either cofactor was strikingly increased by addition of ferric-EDTA or ferric-diethylenetriamine-pentaacetic acid (DTPA) whereas ferric-ATP and ferric-citrate were not effective catalysts. All these ferric complexes were reduced by the nuclei in the presence of either NADPH or NADH. The pattern of iron chelate effectiveness in catalyzing lipid peroxidation by nuclei was opposite to that of .OH production; with either NADH or NADPH, nuclear lipid peroxidation was increased by the addition of ferric ammonium sulfate, ferric-ATP, or ferric-citrate, but not by ferric-EDTA or ferric-DTPA. NADPH-dependent nuclear lipid peroxidation was insensitive to catalase, superoxide dismutase, or .OH scavengers; the NADH-dependent reaction showed a partial sensitivity (30 to 40%) to these additions. The overall patterns of .OH production and lipid peroxidation by the nuclei are similar to those shown by microsomes, e.g., effect of ferric complexes, sensitivity to antioxidants; however, rates with the nuclei are less than 20% those of microsomes, which reflect the lower activities of NADPH- and NADH-cytochrome c reductase in the nuclei. The potential for nuclei to reduce ferric complexes and catalyze production of .OH-like species may play a role in the susceptibility of the genetic material to oxidative damage under certain conditions since such radicals would be produced site-directed and not exposed to cellular antioxidants.

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