Male rats pretreated with thyroid hormones and exposed to halothane in non-hypoxic conditions develop acute liver damage. In order to investigate the mechanisms leading to liver damage in this animal model, the effects of thyroxine (T-4) pretreatment and halothane administration on Ca2+ transport and transmembrane potential were studied in isolated rat liver mitochondria. Five-day T-4-pretreatment reduced the mitochondrial Ca2+ loading capacity and increased the rate of Ca2+ cycling across the mitochondrial membrane. Halothane administration further increased Ca2+ cycling and produced a time- and dose-dependent loss of transmembrane potential which was more pronounced in mitochondria from T-4-pretreated rats than in euthyroid animals. When mitochondria from T-4-pretreated rats were incubated in the presence of the Ca2+ chelator EGTA, membrane potential was well preserved. In contrast, when Ca2+ concentration in the extramitochondrial medium was increased, mitochondria deenergization occurred earlier. These findings confirm that alterations in Ca2+ transport and mitochondrial function can be interrelated events and suggest that a Ca2+-dependent, halothane-induced loss of transmembrane potential could participate in generating acute liver damage in hyperthyroid rats exposed to halothane in non-hypoxic conditions.

THYROXINE PRETREATMENT AND HALOTHANE ADMINISTRATION ALTER CA2+ TRANSPORT AND TRANSMEMBRANE POTENTIAL IN RAT-LIVER MITOCHONDRIA - AN ADDITIONAL MECHANISM FOR HALOTHANE-INDUCED LIVER-DAMAGE IN THE HYPERTHYROID RAT MODEL

VAIRETTI, MARIAPIA;RICHELMI, PLINIO;BELLOMO, GIORGIO
1994-01-01

Abstract

Male rats pretreated with thyroid hormones and exposed to halothane in non-hypoxic conditions develop acute liver damage. In order to investigate the mechanisms leading to liver damage in this animal model, the effects of thyroxine (T-4) pretreatment and halothane administration on Ca2+ transport and transmembrane potential were studied in isolated rat liver mitochondria. Five-day T-4-pretreatment reduced the mitochondrial Ca2+ loading capacity and increased the rate of Ca2+ cycling across the mitochondrial membrane. Halothane administration further increased Ca2+ cycling and produced a time- and dose-dependent loss of transmembrane potential which was more pronounced in mitochondria from T-4-pretreated rats than in euthyroid animals. When mitochondria from T-4-pretreated rats were incubated in the presence of the Ca2+ chelator EGTA, membrane potential was well preserved. In contrast, when Ca2+ concentration in the extramitochondrial medium was increased, mitochondria deenergization occurred earlier. These findings confirm that alterations in Ca2+ transport and mitochondrial function can be interrelated events and suggest that a Ca2+-dependent, halothane-induced loss of transmembrane potential could participate in generating acute liver damage in hyperthyroid rats exposed to halothane in non-hypoxic conditions.
1994
Pharmacology & Toxicology includes all aspects of pharmacology, toxicology, and pharmaceutics. Of particular importance are cellular and molecular pharmacology, drug design and metabolism, mechanisms of drug action, drug delivery, natural products, xenobiotics, and clinical therapeutics. Toxicology coverage considers cellular and molecular effects of harmful substances, environmental toxicology, occupational exposure, and clinical toxicology. Drug bulletins, drug updates, and pharmaceutical newsletters are excluded as are resources on pharmaceutical engineering. Medicinal chemistry, or synthesis and chemical analysis of pharmaceuticals are placed in the Chemistry & Analysis category.
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Inglese
Internazionale
STAMPA
68
2
103
109
HALOTHANE; THYROID HORMONES; FREE CALCIUM; HEPATOTOXICITY; MITOCHONDRIA; MEMBRANE POTENTIAL
5
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Imberti, R.; Vairetti, Mariapia; Richelmi, Plinio; Preseglio, I.; Bellomo, Giorgio
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.1 Articolo in rivista
none
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/138395
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