Increased Prooxidant Action of Hepatic Cytosolic Low–Molecular–Weight Iron in Experimental Iron Overload
Open Access
- 1 June 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Hepatology
- Vol. 11 (6) , 1038-1043
- https://doi.org/10.1002/hep.1840110620
Abstract
In the iron–loaded liver there may be an increase in the putative intracellular transit pool of iron, components of which could be catalytically active in stimulating lipid peroxidation. To study the levels of low–molecular–weight, catalytically active iron in the liver, cytosolic ultrafiltrates were tested in an assay containing rat liver microsomes and NADPH. Malondialdehyde production was used as an index of lipid peroxidation. This assay system was sensitive enough to detect 0.25 μmol/L ferrous iron; progressive but nonlinear increases in malondialdehyde were produced as the iron concentration was increased to 5 μmol/L. Ultrafiltrates from hepatic cytosol of iron–loaded rats had greater prooxidant action than did those from controls. When added to the assay, deferoxamine, an iron chelator, completely suppressed the prooxidant action of hepatic ultrafiltrates, showing that this activity is iron–dependent. Deferoxamine administered intraperitoneally to control animals at a dose of 1 gm/kg completely inhibited the prooxidant effect of hepatic ultrafiltrates prepared from rats killed after 1, 2 and 3 hr. Partial inhibition was observed at 4 hr; by 6 hr the inhibitory effect of deferoxamine was completely lost. Administration of deferoxamine (1 gm/kg intraperitoneally, 1 hr before killing) completely inhibited the prooxidant action of hepatic ultrafiltrates in moderately iron–loaded rats and control but had no protective effect in heavily iron–loaded rats. These results support the concept that iron overload results in an increase in a hepatic cytosolic pool of low–molecular–weight iron that is catalytically active in stimulating lipid peroxidation. This pool can be chelated transiently in vivo by deferoxamine in moderate, but not heavy, iron overload.(HEPATOLOGY 1990;11:1038–1043.).This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hepatic injury in chronic iron overload. Role of lipid peroxidationChemico-Biological Interactions, 1989
- Lipid peroxidation and associated hepatic organelle dysfunction in iron overloadChemistry and Physics of Lipids, 1987
- Iron Overload: Causes and ConsequencesAnnual Review of Nutrition, 1987
- Value of Hepatic Iron Measurements in Early Hemochromatosis and Determination of the Critical Iron Level Associated With FibrosisHepatology, 1986
- Survival and Causes of Death in Cirrhotic and in Noncirrhotic Patients with Primary HemochromatosisNew England Journal of Medicine, 1985
- Genetic HemochromatosisSeminars in Liver Disease, 1984
- Lipid Peroxidation in Iron-Overloaded SpleensClinical Science, 1981
- Transfusional iron overload: The relationship between tissue iron concentration and hepatic fibrosis in thalassaemiaThe Journal of Pathology, 1975
- Long-term Chelation Therapy in Thalassaemia Major: Effect on Liver Iron Concentration, Liver Histology, and Clinical ProgressBMJ, 1974
- Siderosis in the BantuBMJ, 1962