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Liver injury and its molecular mechanisms in mice caused by exposure to cerium chloride.

Archives of environmental contamination and toxicology (2011-04-20)
Haiquan Zhao, Jie Cheng, Jingwei Cai, Zhe Cheng, Yaling Cui, Guodong Gao, Renping Hu, Xiaolan Gong, Ling Wang, Fashui Hong
RESUMEN

Cerium has been demonstrated to damage liver of mice, but very little is known about the molecular mechanisms underlying the mouse liver apoptosis. In order to understand the liver injury induced by intragastric administration of cerium chloride (CeCl3) for 60 consecutive days, the hepatocyte ultrasrtucture, various oxidative stress parameters, and the stress-related gene expression levels were investigated for the mouse liver. The results demonstrated that CeCl3 had an obvious accumulation in the mouse liver, leading to a classical laddering cleavage of DNA and hepatocyte apoptosis. CeCl3 significantly promoted the accumulation of reactive oxygen species and inhibited the stress-related gene expression of superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione peroxidase, metallothionein, heat-shock protein 70, glutathione-S-transferase, P53, and transferring, and it effectively activated the cytochrome p450 1A. It implied that CeCl3 resulted in apoptosis and alteration of expression levels of the genes related with metal detoxification/metabolism regulation and radical scavenging action in mice.

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Sigma-Aldrich
Cerium(III) chloride heptahydrate, 99.9% trace metals basis
Sigma-Aldrich
Cerium(III) chloride heptahydrate, 99.999% trace metals basis
Sigma-Aldrich
Cerium(III) chloride, AnhydroBeads, −10 mesh, ≥99.99% trace metals basis
Sigma-Aldrich
Cerium(III) chloride heptahydrate, purum p.a., ≥98.0% (AT)
Sigma-Aldrich
Cerium(III) chloride, AnhydroBeads, −10 mesh, 99.9%