Effects of Mild Chronic Heat Exposure on the Concentrations of Thiobarbituric Acid Reactive Substances, Glutathione, and Selenium, and Glutathione Peroxidase Activity in the Mouse Liver
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YUICHI KASANUMA, CHIHO WATANABE, CHOONG-YONG KIM, KUN YIN and HIROSHI SATOH
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Environmental Health Sciences, Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine, Sendai 980-8575
To determine whether mild and chronic heat stress leads to oxidative stress and to differentiate such effects of different exposure periods, we kept male ICR-mice at an ambient temperature of either 35°C or 25°C for 6 hours, 3 days, or 7 days and measured the concentrations of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS), glutathione (GSH), selenium (Se), and glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px) activities in the liver. Since the food consumption of the heat-exposed group was only half that of the control, we prepared pair-fed groups, which were kept at 25°C and whose food consumption were limited to those of the heat-exposed group for the 3-day and the 7-day exposure.
TBARS concentrations of the liver was significantly higher in the heat group than the control after the 3-day exposure, while there was no significant difference among the groups after the 7-day exposure. There was no significant difference in GSH concentrations between the heat-exposed group and the control after the 7-day exposure, when the GSH concentration of the pair-fed group was significantly lower than that of the control.
Hepatic cytosolic Se GSH-Px activity in the heat group was significantly less than that in the control group after the 6-hour exposure and it tended to be lower in the heat group than that of the control group after the 7-day exposure, while there was no difference in the total GSH-Px activity among the three groups. Our results showed that mild and chronic heat exposure may cause oxidative damage to organisms and that GSH-related anti-oxidative systems would play an important role to defensive reaction.
Key words---
heat exposure; oxidative damage; glutathione; selenium; liver
© 1998 Tohoku University Medical Press
Tohoku J. Exp. Med., 1998, 185, 79-87
Address for reprints:
Yuichi Kasanuma, Environmental Health Sciences, Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine, 2-1 Seiryomachi, Aoba-ku, Sendai 980-8575, Japan.
e-mail: kasanuma@ehs.med.tohoku.ac.jp
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