Toxicology
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The effects of cold-restraint as a physiological stressor on the glutathione (GSH) content of the liver and other tissues were examined in male mice. Mice of the ICR, NIH, ND/4, and B6C3F1 strains subjected to cold-restraint for 2 or 3 h experienced a loss of hepatic GSH concentrations ranging from approximately 15 to 50%. Though 3 of these strains (ICR, NIH, and B6C3F1) experienced hypothermia as result of the cold-restraint treatment, with average decreases in core body temperature ranging from 3.3 to 9.8 degrees C, hepatic GSH levels were depressed in the ND/4 mouse in the absence of changes in core body temperature. ⋯ In addition to its effects on liver GSH and NPSH concentrations, 1.5 h of cold-restraint stress significantly depressed plasma, heart, kidney, and lung NPSH concentrations. The extent of NPSH depression was equivalent to the GSH depression in the liver, heart, and kidney, despite the observation that the normal contribution of GSH to total NPSH content in these tissues ranged from a high of 89% (liver) to a low of 49% (heart). These results with cold-restraint in the ND/4 mouse suggest that other stressors may significantly depress cellular concentrations of GSH and other thiols, and may thereby render the affected tissues more susceptible to the toxicity of free radicals, electrophilic xenobiotic metabolites, or reactive oxygen species.