A high content of total glutathione and high activities of both GSH S-aryltransferase (CDNB) and GSH peroxidase were found in different segments of the human intestinal mucosa comparable to findings in human gastric mucosa. Intraindividual comparisons of tumorous and nontumorous tissue specimens in patients with adenocarcinomas of the colon and rectum revealed no marked differences in their glutathione content and enzyme activities except in the sigma, where we found significantly lower GSH concentrations and higher GSH S-aryltransferase activities in the carcinomatous tissue. gamma-Glutamyl-transpeptidase activity, a marker of neoplastic cell growth in experimental hepatocarcinogenesis, did not differ between tumorous and nontumorous tissue areas. The presence and high activity of the GSH-dependent enzyme system in different segments of the human intestinal mucosa may reflect its role in the defense against toxic and putative carcinogenic xenobiotics entering the body via the gastrointestinal tract.
The gamma-glutamyl-transferase activity, the total glutathione content, the GSH-peroxidase activity, and the GSH S-transferase activity using an aryl substrate were estimated in the S9 fraction of gastric biopsy specimens taken from patients with normal stomach morphology (n = 24), acute gastritis (n = 15), chronic-atrophic gastritis (n = 10), gastric ulcer (n = 9), and carcinoma of the stomach (n = 12). The total glutathione content of normal gastric mucosal specimens was significantly higher than that of human liver biopsy specimens, whereas the GSH-peroxidase and the GSH S-aryltransferase activities were much lower than those found in the liver. Specimens of gastric ulcer had significantly lower enzyme activities of GSH-peroxidase and GSH-aryltransferase, whereas gastric cancer tissue had significantly lower concentrations of total glutathione. The intraindividual comparison of tumorous and non-tumorous tissue showed a consistent decrease of total glutathione as well as of GSH-aryltransferase activity in carcinomatous tissue.
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