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J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 266, Issue 5, 2724-2731, 02, 1991
RJ Mehlhorn
Nitroxides were used as models of persistent free radicals to study the
antioxidant function of ascorbic acid in the human erythrocyte. It was
concluded that: 1) ascorbate and other reductant(s) derived from
dehydroascorbic acid (DHA) in the presence of thiols are the only
significant reducing agents for nitroxides, 2) glutathione and DHA reduce
nitroxides by a process that cannot be inhibited by ascorbic acid oxidase,
3) erythrocytes can be depleted of ascorbic acid by exhaustive washing in
the presence of membrane-permeable cationic nitroxides such as
N,N-dimethylamino-Tempo, 4) ascorbate-depleted cells do not reduce
nitroxides; however, nitroxide reduction is restored when the cells are
incubated with DHA, 5) reduction of nitroxides in ascorbate-depleted,
DHA-treated cells is significantly faster than in buffered solutions of DHA
and glutathione, 6) several equivalents of nitroxide are reduced relative
to the intracellular ascorbate pool, 7) sustained nitroxide reduction is
observed even when most of the intracellular ascorbate is oxidized, 8) spin
trapping of oxyradicals in tert-butyl hydroperoxide-treated cells is
accelerated with ascorbate depletion and inhibited with ascorbate loading,
9) ascorbate can be quantified within intact cells by analyzing the initial
reduction rates of membrane-permeable cationic nitroxides, and 10)
DHA-stimulated reduction of cationic nitroxides is slower and less
extensive in erythrocytes deficient in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase
than in normal erythrocytes.
Ascorbate- and dehydroascorbic acid-mediated reduction of free radicals in the human erythrocyte
Applied Science Division, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley 94720.
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