Prooxidant and antioxidant hepatic factors in rats chronically fed an ethanol regimen and treated with an acute dose of lindane

Free Radic Biol Med. 1995 Aug;19(2):147-59. doi: 10.1016/0891-5849(94)00235-c.

Abstract

While acute lindane treatment and chronic ethanol feeding to rats have been associated with hepatic oxidative stress, the possible roles of these stresses in the pathogenesis of hepatic lesions reported in acute lindane intoxication and in those observed in some models of chronic alcoholism have not been established. Our previous studies in rats chronically fed ethanol regimens and then treated with a single intraperitoneal (i.p.) dose of lindane (20 mg/kg) showed that while lindane per se was invariably associated with hepatic oxidative stress, chronic ethanol feeding only produced this stress when the dietary level of vitamin E was relatively low. Chronic ethanol pretreatment did not significantly affect the lindane-associated oxidative stress, and neither chronic ethanol feeding nor acute lindane, single or in combination, produced any histologic and biochemical evidence of liver damage. In the present experiment, the acute dose of lindane was increased to 40 mg/kg, and we have studied a larger number of prooxidant and antioxidant hepatic factors. Male Wistar rats (115.5 +/- 5.4 g) were fed ad lib for 11 weeks a calorically well-balanced and nutritionally adequate basal diet, or the same basal diet plus a 32% ethanol/25% sucrose solution, also ad lib, and were then injected i.p. with a single dose of lindane or with equivalent amounts of corn oil. The results indicated that acute lindane treatment to naive rats increased practically all the prooxidant hepatic factors examined (cytochromes P450 and b5, NADPH cytochrome c reductase, NADPH oxidase), as well as the generation of microsomal superoxide radical and thiobarbituric acid reactive substances of liver homogenates, but did not modify any of the antioxidant hepatic factors studied. Conversely, the chronic administration of ethanol alone did not significantly affect the prooxidant hepatic factors but reduced some of the antioxidants (i.e., the activities of GSH-Px and the contents of alpha-tocopherol and ubiquinols 9 and 10). Although chronic ethanol pretreatment further increased the superoxide generation induced by lindane per se, it did not increase but generally reduced the effects of lindane per se on the other prooxidant factors studied. Furthermore, although acute lindane administration to ethanol-pretreated rats was associated with decreases in GSH and catalase (not affected by ethanol or lindane treatment alone), it did not substantially modify the reducing effects of ethanol feeding per se on GSH-Px, alpha-tocopherol, and ubiquinols. Once again, neither chronic ethanol feeding nor lindane treatment, single or in combination, was associated with any evidence of liver damage.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Antioxidants / analysis*
  • Body Weight
  • Energy Intake
  • Ethanol / administration & dosage*
  • Ethanol / blood
  • Food
  • Hexachlorocyclohexane / administration & dosage
  • Hexachlorocyclohexane / pharmacology*
  • Liver / anatomy & histology
  • Liver / chemistry*
  • Liver / metabolism
  • Male
  • Organ Size
  • Oxidants / analysis*
  • Rats
  • Rats, Wistar
  • Triglycerides / metabolism

Substances

  • Antioxidants
  • Oxidants
  • Triglycerides
  • Ethanol
  • Hexachlorocyclohexane