8-hydroxy-2--deoxyguanosine has been researched along with Fever* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for 8-hydroxy-2--deoxyguanosine and Fever
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DL-alpha-tocopherol acetate mitigates maternal hyperthermia-induced pre-implantation embryonic death accompanied by a reduction of physiological oxidative stress in mice.
Maternal hyperthermia induces pre-implantation embryo death, which is accompanied by enhanced physiological oxidative stress. We evaluated whether the administration of DL-alpha-tocopherol acetate (TA) to hyperthermic mothers mitigated pre-implantation embryo death. Mice were exposed to heat stress (35 degrees C, 60% relative humidity) for 12 h or not heated (25 degrees C) on the day of mating. Twelve hours before the beginning of temperature treatment, TA was injected intraperitoneally at a dose of 1 g/kg body weight. After the treatment, zygotes were recovered and the developmental abilities and intracellular glutathione (GSH) levels were evaluated. Another set of mice, with or without TA treatment, was exposed to heat stress for 12, 24 and 36 h, and the urinary levels of the oxidative stress marker 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG) were measured. Heat stress significantly decreased the blastocyst development rate and the GSH content in zygotes, as compared with the non-heat-stressed embryos, while TA administration significantly mitigated the deleterious effects of heat stress with regard to both parameters. Moreover, although the urinary levels of 8-OHdG gradually increased according to the duration of heat exposure, with or without TA administration, the levels were lower in the TA-administered group than in the placebo-injected mice. These results suggest that heat stress enhances physiological oxidative stress, and that TA administration alleviates the hyperthermia-induced death of pre-implantation embryos by reducing physiological oxidative stress. Topics: 8-Hydroxy-2'-Deoxyguanosine; alpha-Tocopherol; Animals; Antioxidants; Biomarkers; Deoxyguanosine; Embryo Loss; Female; Fever; Glutathione; Mice; Mice, Inbred Strains; Oxidative Stress; Pregnancy; Pregnancy Complications; Time Factors; Tocopherols; Zygote | 2008 |
Fever: an integrated response of the central nervous system to oxidative stress.
Immediately after bacterial endotoxin (LPS) enters the circulatory system there is increased production of free oxygen radicals by cells of the reticulo-endothelial system, followed by the release of cytokines considered as putative endogenous pyrogens. Fever originates by central nervous system activities, but neither exogenous nor endogenous pyrogens are able to cross the blood-brain barrier and the true signal which is transmitted to structures inside the blood-brain barrier is still unknown. To study the role of oxygen radicals in fever, we pretreated rats with methylene blue, an inhibitor of superoxide and hydroxyl radical production and investigated the febrile response to LPS in conscious rats by measuring malondialdehyde formation as an index of lipid peroxidation by oxygen radicals. Methylene blue lowered resting malondialdehyde levels to near detection level and significantly suppressed its rise which was regularly found following LPS in the untreated state. Pretreatment with methylene blue completely blocked the febrile response. Since fever is a central nervous system-mediated response these results indicate that the brain is able to sense oxidative stress and vicinal thiol groups of the redox-modulatory site of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) subtype of glutamate receptor-channel complex could function as a possible receptive structure. To test this hypothesis we injected rabbits with the disulfide reducing agent dithiothreitol (DTT), known to penetrate the blood-brain barrier, and monitored its effect on normal and febrile body temperatures. DTT induced, independently of ambient temperature, within minutes and dose-dependently the full pattern of heat loss responses causing a fall of core temperature, indicative of a lowered thermoregulatory setpoint. Pretreatment with a bolus dose of 5 mg/kg DTT, followed by a continuous infusion of 5 mg/kg/h for 3 h completely prevented LPS-induced fever. A bolus dose of 20 mg/kg DTT, starting 30 min after LPS, immediately reversed the febrile cold defense pattern and lowered body temperature. We conclude that DTT reduces in the central nervous system oxidized vicinal thiol groups of NMDA receptors, thereby augmenting glutamate-induced nitric oxide synthase activation, and, thus, enhanced formation of NO, which, in turn, lowers the thermoregulatory setpoint. Reduction of other disulfide-containing molecules, especially oxidized glutathione and thiol-containing enzymes, by DTT by might additionally contribu Topics: 8-Hydroxy-2'-Deoxyguanosine; Animals; Body Temperature; Central Nervous System; Deoxyguanosine; Dithiothreitol; Female; Fever; Glutamic Acid; Lipopolysaccharides; Malondialdehyde; Methylene Blue; Oxidative Stress; Rabbits; Rats; Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate | 1999 |