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. 1988;158(5):583-90.
doi: 10.1007/BF00692567.

Physiological significance of catalase and glutathione peroxidases, and in vivo peroxidation, in selected tissues of the toad Discoglossus pictus (Amphibia) during acclimation to normobaric hyperoxia

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Physiological significance of catalase and glutathione peroxidases, and in vivo peroxidation, in selected tissues of the toad Discoglossus pictus (Amphibia) during acclimation to normobaric hyperoxia

G Barja de Quiroga et al. J Comp Physiol B. 1988.

Abstract

1. Various parameters related to oxidative stress were measured in adult Discoglossus pictus acclimated for 15 days to either normoxia or hyperoxia (PO2 = 710 mmHg). 2. Total weight of the toads and total and relative wet weight of liver, kidneys, lungs and heart were not changed by hyperoxic acclimation. 3. In vivo tissue peroxidation increased in lung, decreased in skeletal muscle, and was not changed in liver, kidney, heart and skin after hyperoxic exposure. 4. Hyperoxic acclimation increased catalase activities in the lung, liver, kidney and heart but not in skeletal muscle and skin. 5. Liver showed higher GSH-peroxidase activity with cumene-OOH than with H2O2 as substrate, whereas lung, skeletal muscle and skin presented similar GSH-peroxidase activities with both substrates. 6. GSH-peroxidase activities did not change between hyperoxic and normoxic animals in liver, lung, skeletal muscle and skin. 7. These results show that catalase, not GSH-peroxidase, is the principal H2O2 detoxifying enzyme involved in the adaptation of D. pictus to hyperoxia.

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