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Developmental changes in alcohol-dehydrogenase activity in rat and guinea-pig liver
122
Citations
12
References
1967
Year
Alcohol-dehydrogenase ActivityOxidative StressHepatotoxicityEnzyme ActivityAlcohol DehydrogenasesHealth SciencesAldehyde DehydrogenaseBiochemistryLiver PhysiologyAlcohol-related Liver DiseaseGuinea-pig LiverMetabolomicsPharmacologyAdult ActivityDevelopmental BiologyPhysiologyMetabolismMedicineCarbonyl Metabolism
1. Alcohol-dehydrogenase activity is first detectable in the rat foetus on about the eighteenth day of gestation, after which time it increases to about 25% of the adult activity at birth. Adult activity is reached at about 18 days after birth. The ethanol-oxidizing capacity of liver slices from rats correlates well with the increase of the enzyme activity in vitro. 2. In the guinea pig there is a steady linear increase from about 17 days before term to 5 days after birth. Adult activity is reached between the sixth and eighth postnatal day. 3. Some kinetic properties of liver alcohol dehydrogenase are very similar in newborn and adult rats. 4. Administration of ethanol to pregnant rats during the latter half of gestation had no effect on alcohol-dehydrogenase activity in the liver of the newborn offspring. Intraperitoneal injections of ethanol to newborn and young rats had no effect on the alcohol-dehydrogenase activity of the livers. 5. Intraperitoneal injections of hydrocortisone and triamcinolone to newborn and adult non-adrenalectomized rats had no significant effect on the increase of the alcohol-dehydrogenase activity as studied up to 4 days after the injection.
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