Protein Information

ID 2484
Name PREP
Synonyms Endooligopeptidase B; PEP; PE; PREP; Post proline cleaving enzyme; Proline endopeptidase; Prolyl endopeptidase; Prolyl endopeptidase (Prolyl oligopeptidase)…

Compound Information

ID 1391
Name carbon disulfide
CAS carbon disulfide

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
1597259 Herr DW, Boyes WK, Dyer RS: Alterations in rat flash and pattern reversal evoked potentials after acute or repeated administration of carbon disulfide (CS2). Fundam Appl Toxicol. 1992 Apr;18(3):328-42.
Because solvents may selectively alter portions of visual evoked potentials, we examined the effects of carbon disulfide (CS2) on flash (FEPs) and pattern reversal (PREPs) evoked potentials. Long-Evans rats were administered ip carbon disulfide either acutely or for 30 days. FEPs or PREPs were recorded prior to and 1, 2, 4, 8, or 24 hr after a single dose of CS2 (0, 100, 200, 400, or 500 mg/kg). Flash evoked potentials were also recorded 1, 2, 6, and 24 hr after the last of 30 doses of 200 mg CS2/kg/day. Acute exposure to CS2 consistently decreased the amplitude of FEP peak N160 at 1 hr, depressed peak N30 amplitude over 2-4 hr, and increased the latency of peaks P21, N30, P46, N56, and N160 for up to 4 hr after treatment. Carbon disulfide decreased the amplitude of PREP peaks P65, N83, P88, and N122 4 hr after treatment. Colonic temperature was depressed up to 8 hr after treatment. Administration of 200 mg CS2/kg/day decreased the amplitude of FEP peak N30 and increased the latencies of peaks P21, N30, P46, N56, and N160 up to 24 hr after the last dose. The differential effects of CS2 on portions of FEPs indicate that FEP peaks can be independently modulated. Changes in PREPs were temporally correlated with alterations in early FEP peaks, but FEP peak N160 was depressed at an earlier time point. Repeated CS2 exposure affected FEPs at lower doses and for a longer time than an acute exposure, similar to the reported greater severity of neurological disturbances following repeated CS2 exposures in humans.
6(0,0,1,1)