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Liver
Unit (EA, JCF-C) and Department of Gastroenterology (MS, JP, JMP), Institut
Malalties Digestives, Instituto Investigaciones Biomedicas August Pi I Suñer,
Consejo Superior Investigaciones Cientificas, Barcelona, Spain; and Experimental
Toxicology and Neurotoxicology Unit (FJR), Department of Physiology, School
of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain |
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SUMMARY:
Because reactive oxygen species (ROS) have been implicated as mediators
of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), the purpose of the present work was
to determine the functional role of mucosal GSH in the trinitrobenzenesulfonic
acid in 50% ethanol (TNBS+ethanol)-induced colitis in rats. Mucosal samples
were taken to evaluate the temporal relationship between the extent of
injury, the levels of glutathione (GSH) during acute colitis induced by
TNBS+ethanol, and the effect of N-acetylcysteine (NAC) administration.
In vitro assays revealed the interaction of TNBS with GSH leading to the
almost instantaneous disappearance of GSH, while the reductive metabolism
of TNBS by GSSG reductase generated ROS. Mucosal samples from TNBS+ethanol-treated
rats indicated a direct correlation between GSH depletion and injury detected
as soon as 30 minutes after TNBS+ethanol administration that persisted
24 hours post treatment. Although, short term depletion of mucosal GSH
per se by diethylmaleate did not result in mucosal injury, the oral administration
of NAC (40 mM) 4 hours after TNBS+ethanol treatment increased GSH stores
(2-fold), decreasing the extent of mucosal injury (60-70%) examined at
24 hours post treatment. However, an equimolar dose of dithiothreitol
failed to increase GSH levels and protect mucosa from TNBS+ethanol-induced
injury. Interestingly, GSH levels in TNBS+ethanol-treated rats recovered
by 1-2 weeks, an effect that was accounted for by an increase of [gamma]
-glutamylcysteine synthetase ([gamma]-GCS) activity due to an induction
of [gamma]-GCS-heavy subunit chain mRNA. Thus, TNBS promotes two independent
mechanisms of injury, GSH depletion and ROS generation, both being required
for the manifestation of mucosal injury as GSH limitation renders intestine
susceptible to the TNBS-induced ROS overgeneration. Accordingly, in vivo
administration of NAC attenuates the acute colitis through increased mucosal
GSH levels, suggesting that GSH precursors may be of relevance in the
acute relapse of IBD.
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