Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10739800 | Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Vitamin E is the primary lipophilic antioxidant in mammals. Lack of vitamin E may lead to an increase of cytotoxic phospholipid-peroxidation products (PL-Ox). However, we could previously show that alimentary vitamin E-depletion in rats did not change the concentrations of dienes, hydroperoxides, and platelet-activating factor-related oxidation products in alveolar type II cells (TII cells). We hypothesized that vitamin E deficiency increases the activity of enzymes involved in the degradation of PL-Ox. Degradation of PL-Ox may be catalyzed by phospholipase A2, PAF-acetylhydrolase, or peroxiredoxins (Prx's). Alimentary vitamin E deficiency in rats increased the expression of Prx-1 at the mRNA and protein levels and the formation of Prx-SO3, but it did not change the expression of Prx-6 or the activity of phospholipase A2 and PAF-acetylhydrolase in TII cells. H2O2-induced oxidative stress in isolated TII cells activated protein kinase Cα (PKCα) and increased the expression of Prx-1 and Prx-6. Inhibition of PKCα in isolated TII cells by long-time incubation with PMA inhibited PKCα and Prx-1 but not Prx-6. We concluded that the expression of Prx-1 and -6 is selectively regulated in TII cells; PKCα regulates the expression of Prx-1 but not Prx-6. Prx-6 expression may be closely linked to lipid peroxidation.
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Authors
Angelika Tölle, Michael Schlame, Nico Charlier, Florian Guthmann, Bernd Rüstow,