Munday R
J Appl Toxicol. 1984 Aug;4(4):176-81. doi: 10.1002/jat.2550040404.
Formation of hydrogen peroxide, the dismutation product of superoxide radical, has been demonstrated in erythrocytes incubated with the mycotoxin sporidesmin. Erythrocytic thiols, both non-protein and protein-bound, were depleted in the presence of sporidesmin, whilst haemoglobin was oxidized to methaemoglobin. Irreversible haemoglobin oxidation also occurred in these cells, shown by the formation of Heinz bodies; purified haemoglobin likewise suffered oxidative damage when incubated with sporidesmin in the presence of glutathione. Sporidesmin has previously been shown to generate superoxide radical in vitro; the erythrocytic changes induced by the mycotoxin, which are characteristically produced by compounds which generate 'active oxygen' species, suggest that it is also capable of generating this radical intracellularly.