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. 1989 Jan 1;58(1):59-70.

[Lipid peroxidation and changes in xanthine oxidase in cerebral ischemia]

[Article in Japanese]
  • PMID: 2802915

[Lipid peroxidation and changes in xanthine oxidase in cerebral ischemia]

[Article in Japanese]
Y Kinuta. Nihon Geka Hokan. .

Abstract

To verify the lipid peroxidation in the focal cerebral ischemia, the levels of alpha-tocopherol, ubiquinone and ascorbate were measured in the ischemic center in rats. The former two were endogeneous lipid soluble antioxidants and the last was a water soluble antioxidant. alpha-Tocopherol, reduced ubiquinone-9 and -10, and reduced ascorbate decreased to 79%, 73%, 66%, and 76% 0.5 hour after ischemia, respectively. alpha-Tocopherol decreased to 63% 6 hours after ischemia, and then reached a plateau, while reduced ubiquinones and reduced ascorbate declined further to 16% and 10% 12 hours after ischemia, respectively, and then reached plateau levels. These results suggest their functional and durational differences as antioxidants against lipid peroxidation in this ischemic model. Although the reciprocal increase in oxidized ubiquinones during ischemia was not observed, that in oxidized ascorbate was noted. The complementary antioxidant system between cytoplasmic and membranous components, the combination alpha-tocopherol/ascorbate, was estimated from the calculated consumption ratio of these antioxidants, assuming that the loss of these reduced antioxidants is due to neutralization of free radicals. This system was suggested to play an important role in an early ischemic period. Urate also markedly increased during ischemia. Therefore, xanthine oxidase activity was measured in rats both in normal brain and in ischemic brain induced by four-vessel occlusion method. In the control rat, the enzyme activity was 0.87 +/- 0.13 nmol/g wet brain/min at 25 degrees C (mean +/- S.D.): 92.4% was associated with the NAD-dependent dehydrogenase form and only 7.6% with the oxygen-dependent superoxide-producing oxidase form. However, the ratio of the latter form increased to 43.7% after 0.5 hour of global ischemia despite the same level in total xanthine oxidase activity. This result suggests the involvement of the oxygen free radicals generated from the xanthine oxidase pathway in the pathogenesis of the ischemic injury of the rat brain.

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