Author:
Djordjevic J,Djordjevic A,Adzic M,Niciforovic A,Radojcic MB
Abstract
Clinical reports suggest close interactions between stressors,
particularly those of long duration, and liver diseases, such as
hepatic inflammation, that is proposed to occur via reactive
oxygen species. In the present study we have used 21-day social
isolation of male Wistar rats as a model of chronic stress to
investigate protein expression/activity of liver antioxidant
enzymes: superoxide dismutases (SODs), catalase (CAT),
glutathione peroxidase (GPx) and glutathione reductase (GLR),
and protein expression of their upstream regulators:
glucocorticoid receptor (GR) and nuclear factor kappa B (NFkB).
We have also characterized these parameters in either naive or
chronically stressed animals that were challenged by 30-min
acute immobilization. We found that chronic isolation caused
decrease in serum corticosterone (CORT) and blood glucose
(GLU), increase in NFkB signaling, and disproportion between
CuZnSOD, peroxidases (CAT, GPx) and GLR, thus promoting H2O2
accumulation and prooxidative state in liver. The overall results
suggested that chronic stress exaggerated responsiveness to
subsequent stressor at the level of CORT and GLU, and
potentiated GLR response, but compromised the restoration of
oxido-reductive balance due to irreversible alterations in MnSOD
and GPx.
Publisher
Institute of Physiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences
Subject
General Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
57 articles.
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