Abstract

Following sham operation for adrenalectomy, a dramatic 30-fold increase in rat hepatic zinc thionein occurs, peaking at 18 hours after surgery. Hepatic cytosolic and serum zinc levels rise concomitantly with zinc thionein. Copper in hepatic thionein and cytosol rises only slightly and serum copper not at all during the period of observation. In the period 18 to 48 hours after surgery the content of hepatic zinc thionein decreases with a t 1 2 of 16.4 hours. Pretreatment with cycloheximide (1 mg/kg b.w.) two hours before surgery inhibits the rise in zinc thionein by 52%, the rise in cytosolic zinc by 56%, and actually causes a decrease in serum zinc by 33%. Pretreatment with the α-adrenergic receptor blocker, phetolamine (10 mg/kg b.w.), or the β-adrenergic receptor blocker, propranolol (10 mg/kg b.w.), 30 minutes before surgery also inhibited the rise in zinc thionein (82% and 60%, respectively) and cytosolic zinc (75% and 47%, respectively), and decreased serum zinc (38% and 44%, respectively) 19 hours after surgery. Treatment with corticosterone (40 mg/kg b.w.) alone or epinephrine (1–20 μg/kg b.w.) alone did not alter hepatic zinc thionein levels 18 hours late, although they each caused hypozincemia and epinephrine raised cytosolic zinc levels. Treatment with corticosterone and epinephrine together did, however, raise zinc thionein levels 3.2-fold (P<0.02). These experiments are consistent with the hypothesis that adrenal hormones are involved in the regulation of zinc metabolism, and, hence, zinc thionein in levels in rat liver following the stress of sham operation.

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