Protective effect of sclerin on a lead-acetate injury affecting the growth and porphyrin metabolism in rat.

Abstract
While a continuous ingestion of lead acetate added in drinking water suppressed the rat growth, depressing in some degree the level of hepatic δ-aninolevulinate (ALA) dehydratase, a very small amount of sclerin (SCL) added simultaneously in the water restored the growth and dehydratase level. Moreover, subcutaneous injection of SCL to the rat not only maintained the ALA dehydratase level, but prevented a marked depression of the level of mitochondrial ALA synthetase in liver caused by intraperitoneal injection of lead acetate. Injection of SCL alone increased tolerably (about 1.8 times) the mitochondrial ALA synthetase, but little the extramitochondrial synthetase. The treatment by SCL was attended by a initial decrease, then a gradual increase in the activity of microsomal drug metabolizing enzyme.