Huang J, Niknahad H, Khan S, O'Brien PJ. Hepatocyte-catalysed detoxification of cyanide by L- and D-cysteine.
Biochem Pharmacol 1998;
55:1983-90. [PMID:
9714318 DOI:
10.1016/s0006-2952(98)00072-0]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 24] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.9] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 02/08/2023]
Abstract
The hepatocyte metabolic pathways involved in the detoxification of cyanide by cysteine have been investigated in vitro using hepatocytes isolated from Sprague-Dawley rats. Cyanide toxicity towards isolated hepatocytes could be prevented by the addition of L- or D-cysteine, cystine, or the cysteine metabolites thiosulfate and mercaptopyruvate, which markedly increased thiocyanate formation. Prior depletion of hepatocyte GSH markedly increased thiosulfate formation from L- or D-cysteine without affecting thiocyanate formation from L- or D-cysteine. This suggested that the major metabolic pathway for thiocyanate formation did not involve thiosulfate. Mercaptopyruvate was a more likely metabolic intermediate, as thiocyanate formation from L-cysteine but not thiosulfate was inhibited markedly by aminooxyacetate, a cysteine aminotransferase inhibitor, and propargylglycine, a gamma-cystathionase inhibitor. Furthermore, propargylglycine prevented L-cysteine cytoprotection against cyanide toxicity. Thiocyanate formation from D-cysteine likely also involved mercaptopyruvate, as thiocyanate formation from D-cysteine but not L-cysteine was inhibited by benzoate, an inhibitor of D-amino acid oxidase. Furthermore, benzoate prevented D-cysteine cytoprotection against cyanide toxicity. Cystine may also be an intermediate, as hepatocyte thiocyanate formation from added L-cysteine was inhibited when L-cysteine autoxidation was prevented with the copper chelator bathocuproine disulfonate. Furthermore, thiocyanate formation by rat liver homogenates with L-cystine was far more rapid than that with L-cysteine. Hepatocyte thiocyanate metabolic intermediates of beta-mercaptopyruvate and thiocystine were proposed for L-cysteine, and beta-mercaptopyruvate was proposed for D-cysteine.
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