Role of glutathione in functioning of the system of antioxidant protection in fish (review)


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Abstract

Oxidative stress causes damage to cell components by reactive oxygen species (ROS) originating from the effect of various chemical pollutants, such as heavy metal cations, polyaromatic hydrocarbons, organochlorine and phosphororganic pesticides, polychlorine biphenyls, dioxins, and other xenobiotics. To avoid pathological consequences of interaction between biological molecules and high-reactive ROS, cells have a detoxification mechanism that uses glutathione, a nonprotein thiol. Glutathione is a component of cellular protection against the toxic action of xenobiotics and metal cations. In the last decade, the effect of environmental pollutants on changes in glutathione concentrations in tissues of aquatic organisms has been touched on in a large number of works. This review summarizes data of the up-to-date studies on glutathione variability in fish tissues under the effect of biogenic and industrial xenobiotics.

About the authors

I. V. Sukhovskaya

Institute of Biology, Karelian Research Centre

Author for correspondence.
Email: sukhovskaya@inbox.ru
Russian Federation, Petrozavodsk, 185910

E. V. Borvinskaya

Institute of Biology, Karelian Research Centre

Email: sukhovskaya@inbox.ru
Russian Federation, Petrozavodsk, 185910

L. P. Smirnov

Institute of Biology, Karelian Research Centre

Email: sukhovskaya@inbox.ru
Russian Federation, Petrozavodsk, 185910

A. A. Kochneva

Petrozavodsk State University

Email: sukhovskaya@inbox.ru
Russian Federation, Petrozavodsk, 185910

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