In response to various environmental stresses including heavy metals, the c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) is phosphorylated and then it phosphorylates c-Jun protein. In the present study, effects of mercury chloride (HgCl2) on JNK signalling pathway were examined in LLC-PK1 cells. When exposed to 10 or 20 microM HgCl2, the level of phosphorylated JNK and the activity of JNK assayed in vitro using glutathione-S-transferase-c-Jun as substrate increased markedly. The level of phosphorylated JNK increased 30 min after HgCl2 exposure and remained elevated even at 8 h. On the other hand, no changes were found in the total amount of JNK protein. Consistent with the activation of JNK, c-Jun proteins phosphorylated on Ser63 and Ser73 were accumulated in cells exposed to HgCl2. Concomitantly, the levels of c-jun mRNA and c-Jun protein were elevated. When compared to other heavy metal compounds such as manganese chloride, zinc chloride, cadmium chloride, and lead chloride, HgCl2 could phosphorylate JNK more markedly. Neither intracellular Ca2+ nor sulfhydryl groups appeared to play a major role in the activation of JNK by HgCl2 exposure in this porcine renal epithelial cell line.
When ddY mice were pretreated with L-carnitine (5, 10 or 20 mmol/kg), clonic as well as tonic seizures induced by pentylenetetrazol (PTZ) were dose-dependently suppressed. A time/response study (PTZ was injected 1, 5, 15 or 30 min after L-carnitine) showed that the anticonvulsive effects were apparent when the interval between L-carnitine and PTZ administration was 15-30 min. Saline containing 43% sucrose prolonged the latency to the first clonic seizure but was less effective than 20 mmol/kg L-carnitine and did not suppress clonic or tonic seizures. Alterations in brain energy metabolites caused by PTZ including increase of lactate and decrease of ATP and phosphocreatine were also suppressed by L-carnitine. L-carnitine was more potent than D-carnitine in prolonging the latency to the first clonic seizure and in decreasing the frequency of clonic as well as tonic seizures. The anticonvulsive effects of L-carnitine in PTZ-induced seizures may be unrelated to the transport of long-chain acyl CoA since they were not interfered with by D-carnitine.
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