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Vol. 281, Issue 2, 855-860, 1997
Institute of Veterinary Pharmacology (B.G., A.W., G.S.) and
Department of Clinical Pharmacology (M.S.), University of Berne, 3012 Berne, Switzerland
The synthetic pyrethroid derivatives permethrin and cyhalothrin are
widely used insecticides that are considered to be relatively nontoxic
to higher animals. However, a variety of toxic effects on mammals have
been reported. We investigated the effect of these drugs on energy
coupling by mitochondria and on the activity of the individual
respiratory complexes. Using isolated rat liver mitochondria, a
concentration-dependent inhibition of glutamate and succinate sustained
state 3 respiration was found for both compounds in the micromolar
range. The effect of pyrethroids on the activities of the complexes I
to V were assessed individually in submitochondrial particles (complex
I) and in freeze-thawed mitochondria (complexes II-V). Complex I (EC
1.6.5.3) was found to be the most sensitive link within the electron
transport chain. Half-maximal inhibition was observed at 0.73 µM
permethrin and 0.57 µM cyhalothrin, respectively, and exhibited
sigmoidal inhibition kinetics. Complexes II, III, IV and V (EC 1.3.5.1, 1.10.2.2, 1.9.3.1, 3.6.1.34) were not significantly inhibited by up to
50 µM of these drugs. Thus, our results reveal a mode of action of
synthetic pyrethroid insecticides not previously reported.
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