Role of superoxide radicals in cytotoxic effects of Fe-NTA on cultured normal liver epithelial cells.

Abstract
We studied the cytotoxic effects of ferric nitrilotriacetate (Fe-NTA) on normal rat liver epithelial cells (RL34) cultured in medium containing 10% fetal calf serum. Marked cytolysis was present in cells exposed to .gtoreq. 25 .mu.g/ml iron of Fe-NTA, but not all the cells exposed to 50 .mu.g/ml iron were lethally injured. The remaining cells showed anomalous growth, namely cell pile-up and aggregation. Superoxide dismutase inhibited this iron-induced cytotoxicity, whereas catalase, mannitol, dimethyl sulfoxide, and 1,4-diazabicyclo-[2.2.2]octane did not. RL34 cells exposed to Fe-NTA actually produced a large amount of superoxide radicals (O2-.), whereas unexposed control cells produced none. Allopurinol inhibited O2-. production and prevented cell injury by Fe-NTA. These results show that the injury to cells produced by Fe-NTA depends on the generation of O2-., the source of which may be xanthine oxidase.