M. Aragno et al., PREVENTION OF CARBON TETRACHLORIDE-INDUCED LIPID-PEROXIDATION IN LIVER-MICROSOMES FROM DEHYDROEPIANDROSTERONE-PRETREATED RATS, Free radical research, 21(6), 1994, pp. 427-435
Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), a lipid soluble steroid, administered t
o rats (100 mg/kg b.wt) by a single intraperitoneal injection, increas
es to twice its normal level in the liver microsomes. Microsomes so en
riched become resistant to lipid peroxidation induced by incubation wi
th carbon tetrachloride in the presence of a NADPH-regenerating system
: also the lipid peroxidation-dependent inactivation of glucose-6-phos
phatase and gamma-glutamyl transpetidase due to the haloalkane are pre
vented. Noteworthy, the liver microsomal drug-metabolizing enzymes and
in particular the catalytic activity of cytochrome P(450)IIE1, respon
sible for the CCl4-activation, are not impaired by the supplementation
with the steroid. Consistently, in DHEA-pretreated microsomes the pro
tein covalent binding of the trichloromethyl radical (CCl3 degrees), i
s similar to that of not supplemented microsomes treated with CCl4. It
thus seems likely that DHEA protects liver microsomes from oxidative
damage induced by carbon tetrachloride through its own antioxidant pro
perties rather than inhibiting the metabolism of the toxin.