Da. Vessey et Kh. Lee, INACTIVATION OF ENZYMES OF THE GLUTATHIONE ANTIOXIDANT SYSTEM BY TREATMENT OF CULTURED HUMAN KERATINOCYTES WITH PEROXIDES, Journal of investigative dermatology, 100(6), 1993, pp. 829-833
Either metal ions, H2O2, t-butyl hydroperoxide (tBHP), or cumene hydro
peroxide (CHP) was added to the medium of cultured human keratinocytes
, and the activities of key peroxide-metabolizing enzymes were examine
d in a sonicated cell supernatant from the treated cells. 200 muM Fe+ + 200 muM Fe+++ was without effect on any enzyme activity. 700 muM CH
P or tBHP decreased glutathione (GSH) peroxidase activity by 90% after
5 h and by 100% at 20 h, even if the CHP or tBHP was removed from the
media after 90 min. H2O2 at 700 muM caused a brief 17% decrease in ac
tivity, which was followed by complete recovery. GSH peroxidase was fo
und to be rapidly inactivated in vitro by CHP, but the enzyme was also
inactivated at 37-degrees-C even in the absence of CHP. GSH prevented
both types of inactivation. Consistent with this in vitro data, in vi
vo depletion of the GSH pool with buthionine sulfoximine led to lower
levels of GSH peroxidase and increased sensitivity to peroxide-induced
inactivation. Neither GSH reductase nor GSH S-transferase were inacti
vated by any treatment although CHP did cause a small increase in the
activity of the latter, which was not due to induction. The activity o
f glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase was decreased 50% following treatm
ent for 5 h with 700 muM CHP or tBHP, whereas H2O2 treatment caused a
brief 15% decline, followed by recovery. The effects of peroxides were
not altered by changing the concentration of Ca++ in the media. Catal
ase was unaffected by concentrations of peroxide up to 700 muM. Inhibi
tion of catalase with aminotriazole slightly enhanced the toxicity of
700 mum H2O2. In summary, organic hydroperoxides at relatively low con
centrations inactivate key enzymes of the glutathione pathway, but hyd
rogen peroxide does not.