Alterations in lipid peroxidation, antioxidant enzymes, and carcinogen metabolism in liver microsomes of vitamin E-deficient trout and rat

1992 
Abstract Feeding rainbow trout for 16 weeks a diet in which the levels of vitamin E were reduced 70-fold resulted in marked depletion (18-fold) of vitamin E levels in liver microsomes from these fish. The susceptibility of hepatic microsomes to lipid peroxidation in vitro and the levels of plasma and liver microsomal lipid hydroperoxides generated in vivo were markedly elevated in vitamin E-depleted trout. No appreciable alterations were observed in the liver microsomal cytochrome P450-dependent mixed-function oxidase system or in the fatty acid composition of trout liver microsomal membranes. Livers from rats fed a vitamin E-deficient diet for 10 weeks also had significantly lower levels of microsomal vitamin E. In addition, total cytochrome P450 levels were depressed (15%) and cytosolic glutathione was enhanced (40%) in livers from rats fed the vitamin E-depleted diet. Covalent binding of [ 3 H]-(+)-benzo[ a ]pyrene-7,8-dihydrodiol to exogenous DNA in vitro was enhanced with liver microsomes from vitamin E-deficient trout and these fish were much more sensitive to the acute toxicity of this carcinogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon. These results indicate that trout may be a useful model for studying the significance of peroxidative pathways in carcinogenesis and their manipulation by dietary antioxidants.
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