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  • Title: Relationship between alpha-naphthylisothiocyanate-induced liver injury and elevations in hepatic non-protein sulfhydryl content.
    Author: Dahm LJ, Bailie MB, Roth RA.
    Journal: Biochem Pharmacol; 1991 Aug 22; 42(6):1189-94. PubMed ID: 1679630.
    Abstract:
    Acute administration of alpha-naphthylisothiocyanate (ANIT) to rats has been used as a model of intrahepatic cholestasis. The mechanism of toxicity of ANIT is unknown, although recent evidence suggests a causal or permissive role for glutathione (GSH) (Dahm LJ and Roth RA, Biochem Pharmacol 42: 1181-1188, 1991). In these studies, ANIT treatment elevated hepatic non-protein sulfhydryl (NPSH) content, an indicator of GSH content, when liver injury was evident. The purpose of the present study was to characterize the effects of ANIT on hepatic NPSH content and to relate these changes to the development of liver injury. In rats fasted for 24 hr, administration of ANIT (100 mg/kg, per os [p.o.]) did not change hepatic NPSH content, bile flow, or serum measurements of total bilirubin concentration, alanine aminotransferase (ALT) activity, or gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGT) activity by 12 hr post-treatment relative to corn oil vehicle controls. However, by 24 hr after ANIT treatment, rats exhibited cholestasis and elevations in serum markers of liver injury. These markers were associated temporally with an increase in hepatic NPSH content, which consisted entirely of GSH. To determine whether the cholestasis caused by ANIT treatment might have caused the elevation of hepatic NPSH content, an extrahepatic cholestasis in rats was produced by ligation of the common bile duct. Bile duct ligation elevated hepatic NPSH content between 6 and 12 hr after ligation. Administration to rats of a non-hepatotoxic analog of ANIT, beta-naphthylisothiocyanate, also elevated hepatic NPSH content 24 hr after treatment. Taken together, these results indicate that the elevation in hepatic NPSH content after ANIT treatment is associated temporally with the onset of liver injury, but this elevation does not appear to participate causally in the mechanism of injury.
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