Effect of Calcium Ion on Lipid Peroxide Formation in Endotoxemic Mice

Abstract
The present study was conducted to determine the possible role of intracellular Ca2+ in lipid peroxide formation in endotoxin-poisoned mice. Leakages of LDH isozyme and acid phosphatase in serum of mice fed a Ca2+-deficient diet were remarkably increased after administration of 200 .mu.g of endotoxin compared to that in endotoxin-nontreated Ca2+-deficient mice. Superoxide anion generation in liver of Ca2+-deficient mice and in mice fed a normal diet greatly increased after endotoxin administration. On the contrary, after endotoxin injection there was scarcely any difference in SOD activity of liver of Ca2+-deficient mice as compared to that in endotoxin-nontreated Ca2+-deficient mice. In spite of an increase of superoxide anion generation there was little or no effect of endotoxin adminstration on lipid peroxide formation in mice given a Ca2+-deficient diet. In the mice treated with a Ca2+-deficient diet, free radical scavenger levels (.alpha.-tocopherol and nonprotein sulfhydryl) in liver tissue after endotoxin injection were markedly decreased compared to those in Ca2+-deficient diet alone. Mice fed a normal diet exhibited a significant decrease of lipid peroxide level in liver by injection of endotoxin together with verapamil (10 mg/kg, s.c.). When mice fed a normal diet were injected with endotoxin, the state 3 respiratory activity showed a 49% decrease, and respiratory control ratio (RCR) of endotoxemic mice liver mitochondria was 39% lower than normal liver mitochondria. No difference could be observed in levels of state 3 and RCR between the mice given verapamil plus endotoxin and the normal mice. These findings suggest the possibility that Ca2+ may participate in the free radical formation in the liver during endotoxemia and also that Ca2+ may play an important role in the damage of liver mitochondrial function in endotoxemic mice.