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LORENA DOS SANTOS CASTRO

Título da Dissertação: Contribuições para o conhecimento dos efeitos do BHT e outros antioxidantes no fígado.

Orientador: Prof. Dr. Adelar Bracht

Data da Defesa: 23/02/2017

 

RESUMO GERAL

INTRODUCTION
Butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT) is amply utilized as an antioxidant in industrially processes foods, cosmetics, pharmaceutical and petrochemical products. It is also commercialized in the form of capsules as a food and health supplement. As antioxidant, BHT inhibits lipid peroxidation, an effect that it also exerts in biological systems. There is also a universal consensus that ingestion of molecular species able to scavenge free radicals (antioxidants) can, in part at least, prevent the deleterious effects of the reactive oxygen species (ROS). The mitochondrial ROS production can contribute significantly to damages to the organelles in several pathologies. For this reason, good free radical scavengers should be active at the lowest possible concentration, allowing the ingestion of lowest possible doses. The evaluation of the antioxidant activity of a given substance is usually assessed by chemical methods, such as those ones based on the capacity of scavenging free radicals generated by the compounds 2,2’-azino-bis-3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulphonic acid (ABTS) and 1,1-diphenyl-2-picryl-hydrazyl (DPPH). There is obviously no guarantee that a given substance active in scavenging free radicals in an artificial system will also be able to scavenge with the same efficiency the reactive oxygen species produced in the mitochondria, for example. In addition to its effects as antioxidant, potential adverse effects of BHT were already reported. For example, there are studies showing that BHT labilizes the lisosomal membranes and disorganizes the mitochondrial structure, facts that could suggest that BHT interferes with cellular metabolism. In fact, there are reports that BHT affects mitochondrial functioning by, at least, two different mechanisms: uncoupling between electron transfer and oxidative phosphorylation and inhibition of complex I of the electron transport chain. This data suggest, in theory, that BHT should either stimulate or inhibit oxygen uptake, stimulate catabolic pathways and inhibit anabolic pathways. Such actions, beside others, have been clearly demonstrated to occur with several uncouplers and respiratory inhibitors.
AIMS
Taking into account what was exposed above, this work has two main objectives: 1) to conduct a systematic study on the effects of BHT on the rat liver, using both the isolated perfused rat liver and isolated mitochondria; 2) to compare the free radical scavenging activity of BHT and other well known antioxidants in chemical systems and in isolated mitochondria. Regarding the latter aspect, this study should clarify about the real antioxidant potential of BHT and several other antioxidants in a biological system (ROS generation in mitochondria).
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Male Wistar rats weighing 200–280 g were used in all experiments. All experiments were done in accordance with the worldwide accepted ethical guidelines for animal experimentation and were previously approved by the Ethics Committee of Animal Experimentation of the University of Maringá (protocol n. 9120290915). Isolated perfused rat liver experiments were done using hemoglobin-free, non-recirculating perfusion (Krebs/Henseleit-bicarbonate buffer, pH 7.4, saturated with O2:CO2 in the proportion of 95:5). BHT was dissolved into the perfusion fluid and infused in the concentration range of 1-500 μM. Lactate and fructose were used as gluconeogenic substrates. Samples of the perfusion fluid were collected and enzymatically analysed for glucose, lactate and pyruvate. Oxygen uptake was continuously monitored by a platinum electrode. The mitochondrial respiratory activity was evaluated by two different assays. The first one was the classical assay in which intact phosphorylating mitochondria were used. Succinate was used as the substrate and the rate of oxygen uptake in the presence (state III) or in the absence (state IV) of ADP was measured, as well as the respiratory control ratio (RC). The final BHT concentrations in this assay were in the range between 10 and 100 μM. Besides this, assays with non-phosphorylating mitochondria were also performed, with the addition of oligomycin (a classical inhibitor of ATP synthase). Succinate was also used as the substrate and BHT was tested in the range between 2x10-9 to 10-4 M. The effects of BHT and 13 other antioxidants on ROS production in mitochondria were also investigated. The rate of mitochondrial ROS production was estimated by measuring the linear fluorescence increase (504 nm for excitation and 529 nm for emission) due to 2’-7’-dichlorofluorescein (DCF) formation from the reduced form of 2’-7’-dichlorofluorescein (DCFH) via oxidation by H2O2 in the presence of horseradish peroxidase, using succinate as substrate. Finally, the in vitro chemical antioxidant capacities were evaluated using both the 2,2’-azino-bis-3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulphonic acid (ABTS) and the 1,1-diphenyl-2-picryl-hydrazyl (DPPH) assays.
RESULTS E DISCUSSION
We did not found any signs that BHT uncouples oxidative phosphorylation nor that it inhibits the respiratory chain in the perfused liver in a significant way, although these effects seem to be clear in isolated mitochondria. Contrary to what is expected from uncouplers, BHT did not significantly stimulate oxygen uptake nor had an inhibitory action on glucose synthesis from lactate. Actually, there was no inhibition of glucose synthesis or oxygen consumption in the concentration range up to 200 μM. Only at the BHT concentration of 500 μM small increments in both parameters were found. Pyruvate production presented an increasing tendency at 50 μM, followed by a peak increment at 100 μM and a subsequent return to the basal levels. Experiments were also done with very low concentrations of BHT, namely 1 μM (10-6 M), by virtue of the report that BHT might uncouple phosphorylation at very low concentrations (10-9 to 10-6 M). However, no modifications of oxygen uptake, glucose production and pyruvate production were found at low concentrations. Transformation of fructose into glucose was also not affected by BHT. Only lactate production was slightly increased at the concentration of 100 μM. However, in the passage from 100 to 200 μM BHT the production of lactate returned to the basal rates. Besides this, there was also a small increase in oxygen uptake, significant only at the concentration of 200 μM, and an increasing tendency for pyruvate production in parallel with the increase in lactate production. Altogether, this results demonstrate lack of an inhibitory action of BHT on glucose synthesis, suggesting a very weak interaction of the compound with the respiratory chain of the mitochondria inside the liver cells. The uncoupling effect of BHT in isolated mitochondria was confirmed, but only at concentrations above 10 μM. Uncoupling at lower concentrations, 109 to 106 M, could not be confirmed. BHT, however, increased ROS production in isolated mitochondria, starting at the concentration of 108 M. This is the opposite of what can be expected from a compound with proven ex vivo antioxidant action. Despite of its prooxidant action in mitochondria, BHT was an effective antioxidant in the ABTS and DPPH assays. Additionally, all 13 other antioxidants tested were capable of acting as free radical scavengers on both chemical assays, although to different degrees and with discrepancies between the two methodologies. At least four of them considerably enhanced the net ROS production in mitochondria: BHT, BHA (butylated
12
hydroxyanisole), gallic acid and ascorbic acid. As already mentioned, BHT increased considerably ROS production starting at the concentration of 108 M and had a maximal stimulation of 59% at 10 M. BHA also started to increase the net ROS production at the concentration of 108 M, and the final increment at 10 M (49%) was less pronounced than that caused by BHT. Ascorbic acid increased slightly the ROS production at the lowest concentrations, but from 105 until 103 M progressive increments occurred, reaching the final value of 44% stimulation. Gallic acid already showed maximal stimulation (62%) at the lowest concentration examined in the present work, namely 109 M. Therefore, a good correlation between the antioxidant activity in the chemical systems and the mitochondria cannot be expected. Some disparities are very pronounced. This is the case, for example, of ascorbic acid, which was the worst ABTS+ free radical scavenger, the best DPPH free radical scavenger and a net stimulator of ROS production in the mitochondria. The reasons why very effective free radical scavengers in chemical systems, such as gallic acid and several others, present either a poor performance in the mitochondria or are even capable of stimulating ROS production, is possibly linked to the complexity of the biological structures which allow a great number of interactions of various kinds. Another group of efficient free radical scavengers in artificial systems were poorly active in the mitochondria, as for example propyl gallate and quercetin. The four most effective antioxidants in the mitochondria, with IC50’s smaller than 10 μM were: resveratrol < chlorogenic acid < epicatechin < coumaric acid. It is already known that several of the compounds tested in the present work can exert a dual role, i.e., they can act as antioxidants under certain situations and in specific places or as prooxidants under distinct conditions. To act as an antioxidant or as a prooxidant, thus, seems to depend not only on the specific conditions in a given biological system but also on the biological system with which the compound is interacting.
CONCLUSIONS
Prooxidant activity of BHT in mitochondria is the opposite what can be expected for a compound that is generally known as an antioxidant. One cannot exclude the possibility that, in mitochondria, in vitro or even in vivo, stimulation of ROS production rather than uncoupling could be the most significant effect of BHT, since the first occurred at low concentrations, while the second only ocurred at relatively high concentrations that, apparently, cannot be reached when this substance is given to intact cells. On the other hand, the results also reinforce the notion that demonstration of free radical scavenging activity for a given compound in chemical in vitro assays is no guarantee that it will act as an antioxidant in the mitochondria.
Key-words: antioxidants, butylated hydroxytoluene, liver metabolism.

 Artigos Publicados Vinculados a Dissertação:

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jbt.21924