Several environmental pollutants, including pesticides, herbicides and persistent organic pollutants play an important role in the development of chronic diseases. However, most studies have examined environmental pollutants toxicity in target organisms or using a specific toxicological test, losing the real effect throughout the ecosystem. In this sense an integrative environmental risk of pollutants assessment, using different model organisms is necessary to predict the real impact in the ecosystem and implications for target and non-target organisms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLinuron is one of the most intensively used herbicides with predictable effects on the environment and non-target organisms. In the present study, two in vitro biological models (a Bacillus sp. and rat liver mitochondria) were used to evaluate linuron toxicity at a cell/subcellular level.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEcstasy, which is used as a recreational drug, is a common street name for 3, 4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA). Another drug of abuse chemically related, though less common than MDMA, is the amphetamine derivative 4-methylthioamphetamine (MTA). MDMA and MTA induce different systemic and organ-specific effects, including neurotoxicity, hyperthermia, nephrotoxicity, cardiotoxicity and hepatotoxicity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMetolachlor is one of the most intensively used chloroacetamide herbicides. However, its effects on the environment and on non-target animals and humans as well as its interference at a cell/molecular level have not yet been fully elucidated. The aim of this study was: firstly, to evaluate the potential toxicity of metolachlor at a cell/subcellular level by using two in vitro biological model systems (a strain of Bacillus stearothermophilus and rat liver mitochondria); secondly, to evaluate the relative sensibility of these models to xenobiotics to reinforce their suitability for pollutant toxicity assessment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIt is increasingly recognised that mitochondria are potential targets to pharmacological and toxicological actions of membrane-active agents, including some 1,4-dihydropyridines derivatives (DHPs). The 5-acetyl(carbamoyl)-6-methylsulfanyl-1,4-dihydropyridine-5-carbonitriles (OSI-1146, OSI-3701, OSI-3761, and OSI-9642) is a new group of DHPs with minor differences on the molecular structure. It has also been shown that OSI-1146 displays cardiovascular, antioxidant, and antiradical activities, whereas OSI-3701 and OSI-3761 display hepatoprotective activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCisplatin (CisPt) is the most important platinum anticancer drug widely used in the treatment of head, neck, ovarian and testicular cancers. However, the mechanisms by which CisPt induces cytotoxicity, namely hepatotoxicity, are not completely understood. The goal of this study was to investigate the influence of CisPt on rat liver mitochondrial functions (Ca(2+)-induced mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT), mitochondrial bioenergetics, and mitochondrial oxidative stress) to better understand the mechanism underlying its hepatotoxicity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPreviously mildronate, an aza-butyrobetaine derivative, was shown to be a cytoprotective drug, through its mechanism of action of inhibition of carnitine palmitoyltransferase-1, thus protecting mitochondria from long-chain fatty acid accumulation and subsequent damage. Recently in an azidothymidine (AZT)-induced cardiotoxicity model in vivo (in mice), we have found mildronate's ability of protecting heart tissue from nuclear factor kappaB abnormal expression. Preliminary data also demonstrate cerebro- and hepatoprotecting properties of mildronate in AZT-toxicity models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe 1,4-dihydropyridines OSI-1210, OSI-1211 (etaftoron), and OSI-3802 are compounds with similar chemical structure. They differ by the length of the alkoxyl chain in positions 3 and 5 of the dihydropyridine (DHP) ring and by their pharmacological action characteristics. However, as far as we know, a clear relationship between the effects of these compounds and the length of the alkoxyl chain in positions 3 and 5 of the DHP has not been established.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSildenafil citrate (Viagra) is a potent and specific inhibitor of cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP)-specific phosphodiesterase type 5 (PDE5), which exhibits cardioprotective action against ischemia/reperfusion injury in intact and isolated heart. The mechanism of its cardioprotective action is not completely understood, but some results suggested that sildenafil exerts cardioprotection through the opening of mitochondrial ATP-sensitive K+ channels (mitoKATP). However, the impact of sildenafil citrate per se on isolated heart mitochondrial function is unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effects of tetrandrine (6,6', 7,12-tetramethoxy-2, 2'-dimethyl-berbaman) on the mitochondrial function were assessed on oxidative stress, mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT), and bioenergetics of rat liver mitochondria. At concentrations lower than 100 nmol/mg protein, tetrandrine decreased the hydrogen peroxide formation, the extent of lipid peroxidation, the susceptibility to Ca(2+)-induced opening of MPT pore, and inhibited the inner membrane anion channel activity, not significantly affecting the mitochondrial bioenergetics. High tetrandrine concentrations (100-300 nmol/mg protein) stimulated succinate-dependent state 4 respiration, while some inhibition was observed for state 3 and p-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone-uncoupled respirations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe potential protective action of 1,4-dihydropyridine derivatives (cerebrocrast, gammapyrone, glutapyrone, and diethone) against oxidative stress was assessed on mitochondrial bioenergetics, inner membrane anion channel (IMAC), Ca2+-induced opening of the permeability transition pore (PTP), and oxidative damage induced by the oxidant pair adenosine diphosphate (ADP)/Fe2+ (lipid peroxidation) of mitochondria isolated from rat liver. By using succinate as the respiratory substrate, respiratory control ratio (RCR), ADP to oxygen ratio (ADP/O), state 3, state 4, and uncoupled respiration rates were not significantly affected by gammapyrone, glutapyrone, and diethone concentrations up to 100 microM. Cerebrocrast at concentrations higher than 25 microM depressed RCR, ADP/O, state 3, and uncoupled respiration rates, but increased three times state 4 respiration rate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConsidering that cerebrocrast stimulates oligomycin-inhibited state 3 respiration simultaneously with mitochondrial transmembrane potential (Deltapsi) dissipation, the mechanism underlying the uncoupler activity of cerebrocrast was assessed by its ability to permeabilize the mitochondrial inner membrane to H(+) or to K(+) or to cotransport anions with H(+). The partition coefficient of cerebrocrast in mitochondrial membrane and its ability to act as a membrane-active compound disturbing membrane lipid organization were also investigated. Cerebrocrast induced no permeabilization of mitochondrial inner membrane to H(+) or K(+), but it was able to transport H(+) in association with Cl(-).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe interference of glibenclamide, an antidiabetic sulfonylurea, with mitochondrial bioenergetics was assessed on mitochondrial ion fluxes (H+, K+, and Cl-) by passive osmotic swelling of rat liver mitochondria in K-acetate, KNO3, and KCl media, by O2 consumption, and by mitochondrial transmembrane potential (Deltapsi). Glibenclamide did not permeabilize the inner mitochondrial membrane to H+, but induced permeabilization to Cl- by opening the inner mitochondrial anion channel (IMAC). Cl- influx induced by glibenclamide facilitates K+ entry into mitochondria, thus promoting a net Cl-/K+ cotransport, Deltapsi dissipation, and stimulation of state 4 respiration rate.
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