sodium-cyanoborohydride and 2-2-4-trimethylpentane

sodium-cyanoborohydride has been researched along with 2-2-4-trimethylpentane* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for sodium-cyanoborohydride and 2-2-4-trimethylpentane

ArticleYear
Assessment of the covalent binding potential of 2,2,4-trimethylpentane to rat alpha 2u-globulin.
    Toxicology and applied pharmacology, 1987, Mar-30, Volume: 88, Issue:1

    Subchronic exposure of male rats to the nephrotoxin 2,2,4-trimethylpentane (TMP) causes an accumulation of protein droplets in the epithelial cells of the renal cortex. Experimental evidence suggests that these droplets contain alpha 2u-globulin, a low-molecular-weight protein found specifically in the urine of male rats. It has been proposed that aldehyde metabolites of TMP form Schiff base adducts with the lysine groups of alpha 2u-globulin and thereby inhibit renal lysosomal processing of the protein. Accordingly, the ability of TMP and its metabolites to covalently bind to alpha 2u-globulin was examined. As a model, a [14C] formaldehyde-alpha 2u-globulin Schiff base was formed. This protein adduct was stabilized by reduction with cyanoborohydride and could be identified by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Protein analysis by SDS-PAGE demonstrated that hepatocytes isolated from male Fischer-344 rats produced significant quantities of alpha 2u-globulin in culture, whereas hepatocytes from female rats did not. A 15-hr exposure of metabolically competent, primary cultures of male rat hepatocytes to [14C] TMP (0.1 and 0.5%, v/v), followed by reduction with cyanoborohydride, dialysis, and analysis with SDS-PAGE, revealed no evidence of radiolabeled alpha 2u-globulin. When [14C]TMP was administered to an adult male Fischer-344 rat (300 mg/kg, ig) 22, 16, and 10 hr before sacrifice, 16% of the administered radioactivity was eliminated in the urine as TMP metabolites. Analysis as above showed no TMP-derived radioactivity in fractions containing alpha 2u-globulin from liver, blood, kidney cortex, or urine. The absence of a detectable covalent interaction between TMP and alpha 2u-globulin following in vitro or in vivo exposure suggests that a TMP-alpha 2u-globulin adduct is not responsible for the excessive formation of protein droplets in the renal cortex of exposed male rats.

    Topics: Alpha-Globulins; Animals; Borohydrides; Dimethylnitrosamine; DNA Repair; Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel; Female; Liver; Male; Octanes; Rats; Rats, Inbred F344

1987