Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5854229 Food and Chemical Toxicology 2010 6 Pages PDF
Abstract
Moderate doses of lithium were chronically administered to mice in order to verify whether the cytoprotective effects of lithium could be in part attributed to a molecular protection conferred by stress proteins/chaperones accumulation. In order to reach serum lithium levels within the common therapeutic values, mice were fed for 6 months on food pellets contained 1 g (L1 group) or 2 g (L2 group) lithium carbonate/kg, resulting in serum concentrations of 0.5 and 0.9 mM Li, respectively. Under these experimental conditions, no clinical side-effects were observed. Urea and creatinine concentrations in serum, lipids peroxidation level and activities of catalase, superoxide-dismutase and glutathione-peroxidase in liver and kidney were not significantly different from control values. Although the expression level of the constitutive HSP73 was not significantly modified, HSP72 was found to be down-regulated in kidney after 1 month. In liver, three protein bands were immunodetected by the anti-GRP94 antibody: 98 kDa and 96 kDa proteins corresponding to more or less glycosylated forms and/or phosphorylated forms of GRP94 and a 80 kDa protein probably being a cleavage product of GRP94. The 96 kDa and 80 kDa proteins were significantly up-regulated in liver of lithium-treated mice as compared to controls.
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Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
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