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    <title>UTas ePrints - In vitro effect of arsenical compounds on glutathione-related enzymes</title>
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    <meta content="Chouchane, Salem" name="eprints.creators_name" />
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<meta content="In vitro effect of arsenical compounds on glutathione-related enzymes" name="eprints.title" />
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<meta content="The mechanism of arsenic toxicity is believed to be due to the ability of arsenite (As(III)) to bind protein thiols. Glutathione (GSH) is the most abundant cellular thiol, and both GSH and GSH-related enzymes are important antioxidants that play an important role in the detoxification of arsenic and other carcinogens. The effect of arsenic on the activity of a variety of enzymes that use GSH has been determined using purified preparations of glutathione reductase (GR) from yeast and bovine glutathione peroxidase (GPx) and equine glutathione S-transferase (GST). The effect on enzyme activity of increasing concentrations (from 1 microM to 100 mM) of commercial sodium arsenite (As(III)) and sodium arsenate (As(V)) and a prepared arsenic(III)-glutathione complex [As(III)(GS)(3)] and methylarsenous diiodide (CH(3)As(III)) has been examined. GR, GPx, and GST are not sensitive to As(V) (IC(50) > 50 mM), and none of the enzymes are inhibited or activated by physiologically relevant concentrations of As(III), As(III)(GS)(3), or CH(3)As(III), although CH(3)As(III) is the most potent inhibitor (0.3 mM < IC(50) < 1.5 mM). GPx is the most sensitive to arsenic treatment and GST the least. Our results do not implicate a direct interaction of As with the glutathione-related enzymes, GR, GPx, and GST, in the mechanism of arsenic toxicity. CH(3)As(III) is the most effective inhibitor, but it is unclear whether this product of arsenic metabolism is produced at a sufficiently high concentration in critical target tissues to play a major role in either arsenic toxicity or carcinogenesis." name="eprints.abstract" />
<meta content="2001-05" name="eprints.date" />
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<meta content="1. Rossman, T. G. (1998) Arsenic. In Environmental and Occupational Medicine (Rom, W. N., Ed.) pp 1011-1019, Lippencott-Raven, Philadelphia.

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21. Nordenson, I., and Beckman, L. (1991) Is the genotoxic effect of arsenic mediated by oxygen free radicals? Hum. Hered. 41 (1), 71-73.[ChemPort][Medline]

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23. Barchowsky, A., Roussel, R. R., Klei, L. R., James, P. E., Ganju, N., Smith, K. R., and Dudek, E. J. (1999) Low levels of arsenic trioxide stimulate proliferative signals in primary vascular cells without activating stress effector pathways. Toxicol. Appl. Pharmacol. 159 (1), 65-75.[ChemPort][Medline]

24. Lin, S., Cullen, W. R., and Thomas, D. J. (1999) Methylarsenicals and arsinothiols are potent inhibitors of mouse liver thioredoxin reductase. Chem. Res. Toxicol. 12 (10), 924-930.[Full text - ACS][ChemPort][Medline]

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29. Styblo, M., and Thomas, D. (1995) In vitro inhibition of glutathione reductase by arsenotriglutathione. Biochem. Pharmacol. 49 (7), 971-977.[ChemPort][Medline]

30. Spector, A., Yang, Y., Ho, Y., Magnenat, J., Wang, R., Ma, W., and Li, W. (1996) Variation in cellular glutathione peroxidase activity in lens epithelial cells, transgenics and knockouts does not significantly change the response to H2O2 stress. Exp. Eye Res. 62 (5), 521-540.[ChemPort][Medline]

31. Asaoka, K., and Takahashi, K. (1983) A colorimetric assay of glutathione S-transferases using o-dinitrobenzene as a substrate. J. Biochem. 94 (5), 1685-1688.[ChemPort][Medline]

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33. Concha, G., Nermell, B., and Vahter, M. (1998) Metabolism of inorganic arsenic in children with chronic high arsenic exposure in northern Argentina. Environ. Health Perspect. 106 (6), 355-359.[ChemPort][Medline]

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36. Snow, E., Hu, Y., Yan, C., and Chouchane, S. (1999) Modulation of DNA repair and glutathione levels in human keratinocytes by micromolar arsenite. In Arsenic Exposure and Health Effects: Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Arsenic Exposure and Health Effects, July 12-15, 1998 (Chappell, W. R., Abernathy, C. O., and Calderon, R. L., Eds.) pp 243-251, Elsevier Science Ltd., Oxford, U.K.

37. Muller, S., Walter, R., and Fairlamb, A. (1995) Differential susceptibility of filarial and human erythrocyte glutathione reductase to inhibition by the trivalent organic arsenical melarsen oxide. Mol. Biochem. Parasitol. 71 (2), 211-219.[ChemPort][Medline]

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39. Lee, T. C., Wei, M. L., Chang, W. J., Ho, I. C., Lo, J. F., Jan, K. Y., and Huang, H. (1989) Elevation of glutathione levels and glutathione S-transferase activity in arsenic-resistant Chinese hamster ovary cells. In Vitro Cell. Dev. Biol. 25 [ChemPort](5), 442-448.

40. Yamanaka, K., Hayashi, H., Tachikawa, M., Kato, K., Hasegawa, A., Oku, N., and Okada, S. (1997) Metabolic methylation is a possible genotoxicity-enhancing process of inorganic arsenics. Mutat. Res. 394 (1-3), 95-101.[ChemPort][Medline]

41. Delnomdedieu, M., Basti, M., Otvos, J., and Thomas, D. (1993) Transfer of arsenite from glutathione to dithiols: a model of interaction. Chem. Res. Toxicol. 6 (5), 598-602.[ChemPort][Medline]

42. Cullen, W., McBride, B., and Reglinski, J. (1984) The reaction of methylarsenicals with thiols: Some biological implications. J. Inorg. Biochem. 21, 179-194.[ChemPort]

43. Aposhian, H. V., et al. (2000) DMPS-arsenic challenge test. II. Modulation of arsenic species, including monomethylarsonous acid (MMA(III)), excreted in human urine. Toxicol. Appl. Pharmacol. 165 (1), 74-83.

44. Styblo, M., Del Razo, L. M., LeCluyse, E. L., Hamilton, G. A., Wang, C., Cullen, W. R., and Thomas, D. J. (1999) Metabolism of arsenic in primary cultures of human and rat hepatocytes. Chem. Res. Toxicol. 12 (7), 560-565.[Full text - ACS][ChemPort][Medline]

45. Aposhian, H. V., et al. (2000) Occurrence of monomethylarsonous acid in urine of humans exposed to inorganic arsenic. Chem. Res. Toxicol. 13 (8), 693-697." name="eprints.referencetext" />
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<meta content="The mechanism of arsenic toxicity is believed to be due to the ability of arsenite (As(III)) to bind protein thiols. Glutathione (GSH) is the most abundant cellular thiol, and both GSH and GSH-related enzymes are important antioxidants that play an important role in the detoxification of arsenic and other carcinogens. The effect of arsenic on the activity of a variety of enzymes that use GSH has been determined using purified preparations of glutathione reductase (GR) from yeast and bovine glutathione peroxidase (GPx) and equine glutathione S-transferase (GST). The effect on enzyme activity of increasing concentrations (from 1 microM to 100 mM) of commercial sodium arsenite (As(III)) and sodium arsenate (As(V)) and a prepared arsenic(III)-glutathione complex [As(III)(GS)(3)] and methylarsenous diiodide (CH(3)As(III)) has been examined. GR, GPx, and GST are not sensitive to As(V) (IC(50) > 50 mM), and none of the enzymes are inhibited or activated by physiologically relevant concentrations of As(III), As(III)(GS)(3), or CH(3)As(III), although CH(3)As(III) is the most potent inhibitor (0.3 mM < IC(50) < 1.5 mM). GPx is the most sensitive to arsenic treatment and GST the least. Our results do not implicate a direct interaction of As with the glutathione-related enzymes, GR, GPx, and GST, in the mechanism of arsenic toxicity. CH(3)As(III) is the most effective inhibitor, but it is unclear whether this product of arsenic metabolism is produced at a sufficiently high concentration in critical target tissues to play a major role in either arsenic toxicity or carcinogenesis." name="DC.description" />
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    <h1 class="ep_tm_pagetitle">In vitro effect of arsenical compounds on glutathione-related enzymes</h1>
    <p style="margin-bottom: 1em" class="not_ep_block"><span class="person_name">Chouchane, Salem</span> and <span class="person_name">Snow, Elizabeth T.</span> (2001) <xhtml:em>In vitro effect of arsenical compounds on glutathione-related enzymes.</xhtml:em> Chemical Research in Toxicology, 14 (5). pp. 517-522.</p><p style="margin-bottom: 1em" class="not_ep_block"></p><table style="margin-bottom: 1em" class="not_ep_block"><tr><td valign="top" style="text-align:center"><a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/2313/1/Chouchane_SnowInVitro.pdf"><img alt="[img]" src="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/style/images/fileicons/application_pdf.png" border="0" class="ep_doc_icon" /></a></td><td valign="top"><a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/2313/1/Chouchane_SnowInVitro.pdf"><span class="ep_document_citation">PDF</span></a> - Full text restricted - Requires a PDF viewer<br />69Kb</td><td><form method="get" accept-charset="utf-8" action="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/request_doc"><input value="2970" name="docid" accept-charset="utf-8" type="hidden" /><div class=""><input value="Request a copy" name="_action_null" class="ep_form_action_button" onclick="return EPJS_button_pushed( '_action_null' )" type="submit" /> </div></form></td></tr></table><p style="margin-bottom: 1em" class="not_ep_block">Official URL: <a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/tx000123x">http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/tx000123x</a></p><div class="not_ep_block"><h2>Abstract</h2><p style="padding-bottom: 16px; text-align: left; margin: 1em auto 0em auto">The mechanism of arsenic toxicity is believed to be due to the ability of arsenite (As(III)) to bind protein thiols. Glutathione (GSH) is the most abundant cellular thiol, and both GSH and GSH-related enzymes are important antioxidants that play an important role in the detoxification of arsenic and other carcinogens. The effect of arsenic on the activity of a variety of enzymes that use GSH has been determined using purified preparations of glutathione reductase (GR) from yeast and bovine glutathione peroxidase (GPx) and equine glutathione S-transferase (GST). The effect on enzyme activity of increasing concentrations (from 1 microM to 100 mM) of commercial sodium arsenite (As(III)) and sodium arsenate (As(V)) and a prepared arsenic(III)-glutathione complex [As(III)(GS)(3)] and methylarsenous diiodide (CH(3)As(III)) has been examined. GR, GPx, and GST are not sensitive to As(V) (IC(50) &gt; 50 mM), and none of the enzymes are inhibited or activated by physiologically relevant concentrations of As(III), As(III)(GS)(3), or CH(3)As(III), although CH(3)As(III) is the most potent inhibitor (0.3 mM &lt; IC(50) &lt; 1.5 mM). GPx is the most sensitive to arsenic treatment and GST the least. Our results do not implicate a direct interaction of As with the glutathione-related enzymes, GR, GPx, and GST, in the mechanism of arsenic toxicity. CH(3)As(III) is the most effective inhibitor, but it is unclear whether this product of arsenic metabolism is produced at a sufficiently high concentration in critical target tissues to play a major role in either arsenic toxicity or carcinogenesis.</p></div><table style="margin-bottom: 1em" border="0" cellpadding="3" class="not_ep_block"><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">Item Type:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row">Article</td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">Subjects:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row"><a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/view/subjects/320504.html">320000 Medical and Health Sciences &gt; 320500 Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences &gt; 320504 Toxicology (incl. Clinical Toxicology)</a><br /><a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/view/subjects/270108.html">270000 Biological Sciences &gt; 270100 Biochemistry and Cell Biology &gt; 270108 Enzymes</a></td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">Collections:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row">UNSPECIFIED</td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">ID Code:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row">2313</td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">Deposited By:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row"><span class="ep_name_citation"><span class="person_name">Dr Elizabeth T Snow</span></span></td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">Deposited On:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row">24 Oct 2007 11:15</td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">Last Modified:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row">08 Feb 2008 14:56</td></tr><tr><th valign="top" class="ep_row">ePrint Statistics:</th><td valign="top" class="ep_row"><a target="ePrintStats" href="/es/index.php?action=show_detail_eprint;id=2313;">View statistics for this ePrint</a></td></tr></table><p align="right">Repository Staff Only: <a href="http://eprints.utas.edu.au/cgi/users/home?screen=EPrint::View&amp;eprintid=2313">item control page</a></p>
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