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1.
The effect of exogenously added vitamin E and its synthetic analogues (the hydrophilic form of vitamin E and chromans C13and C1) at a concentration of 9.86 × 10–5M on the growth, lipogenic activity, and the fatty acid composition of the eicosapolyenoic acid–synthesizing oomycete Pythium debaryanumwas studied. The effect was found to depend on the molecular structure of particular compounds. For instance, vitamin E and chroman C13stimulated fungal growth, whereas chroman C1inhibited it. The hydrophilic form of vitamin E enhanced the lipogenic activity of the oomycete. The studied compounds, which possess antioxidant activity, did not exert any noticeable effect on the content of eicosapolyenoic acids and the degree of the unsaturation of fungal lipids.  相似文献   

2.
Rat liver lipoyl transacetylase catalyzes the formation of acetyl dihydrolipoic acid from acetyl coenzyme A and dihydrolipoic acid. In an earlier paper the formation of acetyl dihydrolipoic from pyruvate and dihydrolipoic acid catalyzed by pyruvate dehydrogenase has been reported. Acetyl dihydrolipoic acid is a substrate for citrate synthase, acetyl coenzyme A carboxylase and fatty acid synthetase. The Vmax. for citrate synthase with acetyl dihydrolipoic acid was identical to acetyl coenzyme A (approximately 1 μmol citrate formed/min/mg protein) while the apparent Km was approximately 4 times higher with acetyl dihydrolipoic acid as the substrate. This may be due to the fact that synthetic acetyl dihydrolipoic acid is a mixture of 4 possible isomers and only one of them may be the substrate for the enzymatic reaction. While dihydrolipoic acid can replace coenzyme A in the activation of succinate catalyzed by succinyl coenzyme A synthetase, the transfer of coenzyme A between succinate and acetoacetyl dihydrolipoic acid catalyzed by succinyl coenzyme A: 3 oxo-acid coenzyme A transferase does not occur.  相似文献   

3.
I. L. Sun  E. E. Sun  F. L. Crane 《Protoplasma》1995,184(1-4):214-219
Summary The addition of coenzyme Q10 to culture media stimulates the serum-free growth of HeLa, HL-60 cells, and mouse fibroblasts (Balb/3T3). With HeLa cells, the stimulation by coenzyme Q10 is additive to the stimulation by ferricyanide, an impermeable electron acceptor for the transplasma membrane electron transport. This combined response to coenzyme Q10 and ferricyanide is enhanced with insulin. -Tocopherylquinone can also stimulate the growth of HeLa cells, but vitamin K1 is inactive. Specificity of quinone effects is indicated. Serum-free growth of Balb/3T3 and SV 40 transformed BaIb/3T3 (SV/T2) cells is also stimulated by coenzyme Qio with stimulation similar to HeLa cells. However, Balb/3T3 cells are not stimulated by ferricyanide, which does not increase the response to coenzyme Q10. The transformed cells (SV/T2) respond better to ferricyanide alone, but the effects of coenzyme Qio and ferricyanide are not additive. Serum-free growth of HL-60 cells is stimulated dramatically by coenzyme Q10. The extent of growth stimulation on HL-60 cells is almost six-fold that of HeLa or Balb/3T3 cells. The stimulation of NADH-ferricyanide reductase (a transmembrane redox enzyme) by coenzyme Q10 with HL-60 cells is similar to their growth pattern in response to coenzyme Q10. Unlike HL-60, HeLa and Balb/3T3 cells show little stimulation of ferricyanide reduction by coenzyme Q10. The stimulatory effect on both ferricyanide reduction and cell growth by the short side-chain coenzyme Q2 is much less than that of the long side-chain coenzyme Q10. Ferricyanide reduction by HeLa cells is inhibited by coenzyme Q analogs such as 2,3-dimethoxy-5-chloro-6-naphthyl-mercapto-coenzyme Q and 2-methoxy-3-ethoxyl-5-methyl-6-hexadecyl-mercapto-coenzyme Q. However, these inhibitions are reversed by coenzyme Q10. The growth inhibition of HL-60 cells by other coenzyme Q analogs, such as capsiacin can also be reversed by coenzyme Q10. These data indicate that plasma membrane-based NADH oxidation or modification of the membrane quinone redox balance may be a basis for the growth stimulation.  相似文献   

4.
A coenzyme B12-dependent glycerol dehydratase from Lactobacillus reuteri has been purified and characterized. The dehydratase has a molecular weight of approximately 200,000, and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis yielded a single major band with a molecular weight of 52,000. Km values for substrates and coenzyme B12 were in the millimolar and the submicromolar range, respectively.  相似文献   

5.
Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyses the formation of methane from methyl-coenzyme M (CH3-S-CoM) and coenzyme B (HS-CoB) in methanogenic archaea. The enzyme has an 222 subunit structure forming two structurally interlinked active sites each with a molecule F430 as a prosthetic group. The nickel porphinoid must be in the Ni(I) oxidation state for the enzyme to be active. The active enzyme exhibits an axial Ni(I)-based electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signal and a UV–vis spectrum with an absorption maximum at 385 nm. This state is called the MCR-red1 state. In the presence of coenzyme M (HS-CoM) and coenzyme B the MCR-red1 state is in part converted reversibly into the MCR-red2 state, which shows a rhombic Ni(I)-based EPR signal and a UV–vis spectrum with an absorption maximum at 420 nm. We report here for MCR from Methanothermobacter marburgensis that the MCR-red2 state is also induced by several coenzyme B analogues and that the degree of induction by coenzyme B is temperature-dependent. When the temperature was lowered below 20°C the percentage of MCR in the red2 state decreased and that in the red1 state increased. These changes with temperature were fully reversible. It was found that at most 50% of the enzyme was converted to the MCR-red2 state under all experimental conditions. These findings indicate that in the presence of both coenzyme M and coenzyme B only one of the two active sites of MCR can be in the red2 state (half-of-the-sites reactivity). On the basis of this interpretation a two-stroke engine mechanism for MCR is proposed.  相似文献   

6.
Transketolase from baker's yeast is a dimeric enzyme with a molecular weight of 158,000 ± 4000. Sedimentation velocity and sedimentation equilibrium experiments indicate that the enzyme dissociates at low concentrations (less than 0.1 mg/ml) in the absence of the coenzyme, thiamine pyrophosphate. However, no such dissociation was detected in the presence of coenzyme. Reacting enzyme sedimentation velocity measurements showed that the reacting species of the enzyme is a dimer with an s20,w of 7.7 S.  相似文献   

7.
Reduced and oxidized coenzyme Q10 (Q10H2 and Q10) in guinea-pig liver mitochondria were rapidly extracted and determined by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The percentages of Q10H2 as compared to the total (sum of Q10 and Q10H2) were increased by the addition of respiratory substrates such as succinate, malate and β-hydroxybutyrate (State 4). The levels of Q10H2 in State 4 were increased more extensively with electron-transport inhibitors such as KCN, NaN3 and antimycin A. These results indicate that the method for determining Q10H2 and Q10 by HPLC is quite useful for investigation of the physiological function of coenzyme Q in mitochondria and other organelles. The reduced and oxidized coenzyme Q levels of rat liver mitochondria, which contain both coenzyme Q9 and coenzyme Q10, were measured simultaneously. The results suggest that coenzymes Q9 and Q10 play a similar role as an electron carriers. The liver microsomes of guinea-pig contained approx. 133 nmol total coenzyme Q10 per g protein. The Q10H2 levels of microsomes were increased from 46.5 to 67.5 and 64.8% with NADH and NADPH, respectively. The plasma levels of total coenzyme Q were 0.92 μg/ml for man, 0.35 μg/ml for guinea-pig and 0.27 μg/ml for rat. The reduced coenzyme Q were also present in those plasma samples. The levels of reduced coenzyme Q were 51.1, 48.9 and 65.3%, respectively.  相似文献   

8.
The three gldCDE genes from Lactobacillus diolivorans, that encode the three subunits of the glycerol dehydratase, were cloned and the proteins were co-expressed in soluble form in Escherichia coli with added sorbitol and betaine hydrochloride. The purified enzyme exists as a heterohexamer (α2β2γ2) structure with a native molecular mass of 210 kDa. It requires coenzyme B12 for catalytic activity and is subject to suicide inactivation by glycerol during catalysis. The enzyme had maximum activity at pH 8.6 and 37 °C. The apparent K m values for coenzyme B12, 1,2-ethanediol, 1,2-propanediol, and glycerol were 1.5 μM, 10.5 mM, 1.3 mM, and 5.8 mM, respectively. Together, these results indicated that the three genes gldCDE encoding the proteins make up a coenzyme B12-dependent diol dehydratase and not a glycerol dehydratase.  相似文献   

9.
We have previously shown that a coenzyme-B12 analog, adenosylcobalamin (AdoCbl)-(e-OH), with the e-propionamide group converted to a carboxylic acid, serves as a poor coenzyme for dioldehydrase. During the course of the catalytic process, the enzyme AdoCbl-(e-OH) complex becomes catalytically inactive (T. Toraya, E. Krodel, A. S. Mildvan, and R. H. Abeles, 1979, Biochemistry18, 417–426). We have now examined the mechanism of this inactivation further. Inactivation only occurs in the presence of substrate. The dioldehydrase coenzyme analog complex is stable in the absence of substrate. In the inactivated complex, the coenzyme analog was stoichiometrically converted to a cob(II)alamin species. The cob-(II)alamin formed remained irreversibly bound at the active site of the enzyme and resisted oxidation by O2 even in the presence of CN?. Stoichiometric formation of 5′-deoxyadenosine from the 5′-deoxy-5′-adenosyl moiety of the coenzyme analog was demonstrated with [8-14C]-AdoCbl(e-OH). This nucleoside also remained tightly bound to the enzyme and was not exchangeable with free 5′-deoxyadenosine nor was it removed by Sephadex chromatography. The rate of inactivation showed no deuterium isotope effect when the inactivation occurred in the presence of l,2-propanediol-l-d2. The inactivated complex was resolved by acid ammonium sulfate treatment into the intact apoenzyme and the hydroxocobalamin derivative. This indicates that the apoenzyme itself is not modified in the inactivation process. These results suggest that the inactivation reaction occurs from one of the intermediates in the normal catalysis. We propose that the inactivation is due to incorrect binding of the modified coenzyme in an intermediate of the catalytic process. This incorrect binding leads to the loss of the substrate radical, and consequently, to loss of catalytic activity.  相似文献   

10.
The vital role of coenzyme Q in mitochondrial electron transfer and its regulation, and in energy conservation, is well established. However, the role of coenzyme Q in free oxyradical formation and as an antioxidant remains controversial. Demonstration of the existence of the semiquinone form of coenzyme Q during electron transport, coupled with recent evidence that hydrogen peroxide (but not molecular oxygen) may act as an oxidant of the semiquinone, suggests that the highly reactive OH. radical may be formed from the semiquinone. On the other hand, data exist implicating the Fe-S species as the source of electron transfer chain, free radical production. Additional data exist suggesting instead that the unpaired electron of the coenzyme Q semiquinone most likely dismutases superoxide radicals. These concepts and those arising from observations at several levels of organization including subcellular systems, intact animals, and human subjects in the clinical setting, supporting the concept of reduced coenzyme Q as an antioxidant, will be presented. The results of recent studies on the interaction between the two-electron quinone reductase--DT diaphorase and coenzyme Q10 will be presented. The possibility that superoxide dismutase may interact with reduced coenzyme Q, in conjunction with DT diaphorase inhibiting its autoxidation, will be described. The regulation of cellular coenzyme Q concentrations during oxidative stress accompanying aerobic exercise, resulting in increased protection from free radical damage, will also be presented.  相似文献   

11.
Purple nonsulfur bacteria, Rhodospirillum rubrum and Rhodopseudomonas spheroides were found to possess coenzyme B12-dependent glutamate mutase activity. Cell-free extracts of these bacteria grown on Co2+-containing media catalyzed the conversion of glutamate to β-methylaspartate and further to mesaconate. The activity of the cell-free extracts of these organisms cultivated on Co2+-deficient media was markedly lower than that of the normal cells. Addition of coenzyme B12 to the former reaction mixture enhanced the mesaconate formation via β-methylaspartate. These results indicate the involvement of coenzyme Independent glutamate mutase of these bacteria in the dissimilation of glutamate to acetyl-CoA and pyruvate through the following pathway.

glutamate→β→methylaspartate→mesaconate→citramalate→→acetyl-CoA, pyruvate On the other hand, a greater part of glutamate was converted to α-hydroxyglutarate and succinate with the cell-free extracts of these photosynthetic bacteria. This fact, taking account of the presence of propionyl-CoA carboxylase in these bacteria, implies the participation of coenzyme B12-dependent (R)-methylmalonyl-CoA mutase in the formation of succinate via the following route.

glutamate→α-ketoglutarate→α-hydroxyglutarate→propionate→propionyl-CoA→(S)-methylmalonyl-CoA→(R)-methylmalonyl-CoA→succinyl-CoA  相似文献   

12.
Many investigators have purified an aldehyde oxidase from mammalian livers, and described reactions of this enzyme with diverse substrates. Coenzyme Q10 was unambiguously identified and found present in some of these enzyme preparations. It was considered that coenzyme Q10 might participate in the functionality of this enzyme, but the validity of the intrinsic association of coenzyme Q10 was questioned. We have similarly purified aldehyde oxidase from rabbit livers. No coenzyme Q10 could be detected under controlled conditions for detecting the presence of coenzyme Q10. It is concluded that coenzyme Q10 may be a contaminant of some aldehyde oxidase preparations, and that it is not intrinsic for the functionality of this enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
Trimethylamine dehydrogenase (TMADH) and dimethylamine dehydrogenase (DMADH) were purified from Hyphomicrobium X. The absorbance spectra of the two enzymes were similar with λmax = 443 nm for TMADH and 440 nm for DMADH. DMADH had an apparent molecular weight of 138,000 daltons and was composed of two subunits of similar molecular weights. DMADH contained 3.91 atoms S and 4.55 atoms Fe per mole of the enzyme. Both DMADH and TMADH contained a covalently bound yellow coenzyme. The coenzyme-peptides obtained from DMADH and TMADH of Hyphomicrobium X by tryptic-chymotryptic digestion were partially purified and found to differ electrophoretically and chromatographically from the coenzyme-peptide obtained similarly from TMADH of bacterium W3A1. After digestion with aminopeptidase M the aminoacyl-coenzymes from the three enzymes had identical spectral, electrophoretic and chromatographic properties. DMADH is only the second enzyme yet found to contain 6-S-cysteinyl-FMN as coenzyme. Dissimilarities between the coenzyme-peptides of DMADH and TMADH from either Hyphomicrobium X or bacterium W3A1 are consequently located in the peptide component.  相似文献   

14.
Anaerobic metabolism of most aromatic acids is initiated by coenzyme A thioester formation. Rhodopseudomonas palustris grows well under anaerobic, phototrophic conditions with many aromatic acids, including benzoate and 4-hydroxybenzoate, as a carbon source. A coenzyme A ligase that reacts with 4-hydroxybenzoate was purified from 4-hydroxybenzoate-grown cells of R. palustris. This enzyme required MgATP, reduced coenzyme A, and 4-hydroxybenzoate, benzoate, or cyclohex-1,4-dienecarboxylate for optimal activity but also used phosphopantetheine, cyclohex-2,5-dienecarboxylate, and 4-fluorobenzoate at lower rates. The 4-hydroxybenzoate-coenzyme A ligase differed in molecular characteristics from a previously described benzoate-coenzyme A ligase from R. palustris, and the two ligases did not cross-react immunologically. The gene encoding the 4-hydroxybenzoate enzyme was cloned and sequenced. The deduced gene product showed about 20% amino acid identity with bacterial coenzyme A ligases involved in aerobic degradation of aromatic acids. An R. palustris mutant carrying a disrupted 4-hydroxybenzoate-coenzyme A ligase gene was unable to grow with 4-hydroxybenzoate under anaerobic conditions, indicating that the enzyme is essential for anaerobic degradation of this compound.  相似文献   

15.
The gene locus acoE, which is involved in the utilization of acetoin in Alcaligenes eutrophus, was identified as the structural gene of an acetyl coenzyme A synthetase (acetate:coenzyme A ligase [AMP forming]; EC 6.2.1.1). This gene was localized on a 3.8-kbp SmaI-EcoRI subfragment of an 8.1-kbp EcoRI restriction fragment (fragment E) that was cloned recently (C. Fründ, H. Priefert, A. Steinbüchel, and H. G. Schlegel, J. Bacteriol. 171:6539-6548, 1989). The 1,983 bp acoE gene encoded a protein with a relative molecular weight of 72,519, and it was preceded by a putative Shine-Dalgarno sequence. A comparison analysis of the amino acid sequence deduced from acoE revealed a high degree of homology to primary structures of acetyl coenzyme A synthetases from other sources (amounting to up to 50.5% identical amino acids). Tn5 insertions in two transposon-induced mutants of A. eutrophus, that were impaired in the catabolism of acetoin were mapped 481 and 1,159 bp downstream from the translational start codon of acoE. The expression of acoE in Escherichia coli led to the formation of an acyl coenzyme A synthetase that accepted acetate as the preferred substrate (100% relative activity) but also reacted with propionate (46%) and hydroxypropionate (87%); fatty acids consisting of four or more carbon atoms were not accepted. In addition, evidence for the presence of a second acyl coenzyme A synthetase was obtained; this enzyme exhibited a different substrate specificity. The latter enzyme is obviously required for the activation of propionate, e.g., during the formation of the storage compound poly(3-hydroxybutyric acid-co-3-hydroxyvaleric acid) when propionate is provided as the sole carbon source. An analysis of mutants provided evidence that the expression of the uptake protein for propionate depends on the presence of alternate sigma factor sigma 54.  相似文献   

16.
Steady-state kinetics of the bovine heart NADH:coenzyme Q oxidoreductase reaction were analyzed in the presence of various concentrations of NADH and coenzyme Q with one isoprenoid unit (Q1). Product inhibitions by NAD+ and reduced coenzyme Q1 were also determined. These results show an ordered sequential mechanism in which the order of substrate binding and product release is Q1–NADH–NAD+–Q1H2. It has been widely accepted that the NADH binding site is likely to be on the top of a large extramembrane portion protruding to the matrix space while the Q1 binding site is near the transmembrane moiety. The rigorous controls for substrate binding and product release are indicative of a strong, long range interaction between NADH and Q1 binding sites.  相似文献   

17.
Dihydroxyacetone-phosphate:acyl coenzyme A acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.42) was solubilized and partially purified from guinea pig liver crude peroxisomal fraction. The peroxisomal membrane was isolated after osmotic shock treatment and the bound dihydroxyacetone-phosphate acyltransferase was solubilized by treatment with a mixture of KCl-sodium cholate. The solubilized enzyme was partially purified by ammonium sulfate fractionation followed by Sepharose 6B gel filtration. The enzyme was purified 1200-fold relative to the guinea pig liver homogenate and 80- to 100-fold from the crude peroxisomal fraction, with an overall yield of 25–30% from peroxisomes. The partially purified enzyme was stimulated two- to fourfold by Asolectin (a soybean phospholipid preparation), and also by individual classes of phospholipid such as phosphatidylcholine and phosphatidylglycerol. The kinetic properties of the enzyme showed that in the absence of Asolectin there was a discontinuity in the reciprocal plot indicating two different apparent Km values (0.1 and 0.5 mm) for dihydroxyacetone phosphate. The Vmax was 333 nmol/min/mg protein. In the presence of Asolectin the reciprocal plot was linear, with a Km = 0.1 mm and no change in Vmax. The enzyme catalyzed both an exchange of acyl groups between dihydroxyacetone phosphate and palmitoyl dihydroxyacetone phosphate in the presence of CoA and the formation of palmitoyl [3H]coenzyme A from palmitoyl dihydroxyacetone phosphate and [3H]coenzyme A, indicating that the reaction is reversible. The partially purified enzyme preparation had negligible glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase (EC 2.3.1.15) activity.  相似文献   

18.
The ability of acetyl coenzyme A synthesizing carbon monoxide dehydrogenase isolated from Clostridium thermoaceticum to catalyze the exchange of [3'-32P]coenzyme A with acetyl coenzyme A is studied. This exchange is found to have a rate exceeding that of the acetyl coenzyme A carbonyl exchange also catalyzed by CO dehydrogenase ([1-14C]acetyl coenzyme A + CO in equilibrium acetyl coenzyme A + 14CO). These two exchanges are diagnostic of the ability of CO dehydrogenase to synthesize acetyl coenzyme A from a methyl group, coenzyme A, and carbon monoxide. The kinetic parameters for the coenzyme A exchange have been determined: Km(acetyl coenzyme A) = 1500 microM, Km(coenzyme A) = 50 microM, and Vmax = 2.5 mumol min-1 mg-1. Propionyl coenzyme A is shown to be a substrate (Km approximately 5 mM) for the coenzyme A exchange, with a rate 1/15 that of acetyl coenzyme A, but is not a substrate for the carbonyl exchange. CO dehydrogenase capable of catalyzing both these two exchanges, and the oxidation of CO to CO2, is isolated as a complex of molecular weight 410,000 consisting of three proteins in an alpha 2 beta 2 gamma 2 stoichiometry. The proposed gamma subunit, not previously reported as part of CO dehydrogenase, copurifies with the enzyme and has the same molecular weight on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis as the disulfide reductase previously separated from CO dehydrogenase in a final chromatographic step.  相似文献   

19.
Methanosarcina barkeri was recently shown to contain two cytoplasmic isoenzymes of methylcobalamin: coenzyme M methyltransferase (methyltransferase 2). Isoenzyme I predominated in methanol-grown cells and isoenzyme II in acetate-grown cells. It was therefore suggested that isoenzyme I functions in methanogenesis from methanol and isoenzyme II in methanogenesis from acetate. We report here that cells of M. barkeri grown on trimethylamine, H2/CO2, or acetate contain mainly isoenzyme II. These cells were found to have in common that they can catalyze the formation of methane from trimethylamine and H2, whereas only acetate-grown cells can mediate the formation of methane from acetate. Methanol-grown cells, which contained only low concentrations of isoenzyme II, were unable to mediate the formation of methane from both trimethylamine and acetate. These and other results suggest that isoenzyme II (i) is employed for methane formation from trimethylamine rather than from acetate, (ii) is constitutively expressed rather than trimethylamine-induced, and (iii) is repressed by methanol. The constitutive expression of isoenzyme II in acetate-grown M. barkeri can explain its presence in these cells. The N-terminal amino acid sequences of isoenzyme I and isoenzyme II were analyzed and found to be only 55% similar.Abbreviations H-S-CoM coenzyme M or 2-mercaptoethane-sulfonate - CH3-S-CoM methyl-coenzyme M or 2(methylthio)-ethanesulfonate - [Co] cobalamin - CH3-[Co] methylcobalamin - H4MPT tetrahydromethanopterin - CH3-H4MPT N 5-methyltetrahydromethanopterin - MT1 methyltransferase 1 or methanol: 5-hydroxybenzimidazolyl cobamide methyltransferase - MT2 methyltransferase 2 or methylcobalamin: coenzyme M methyltransferase - Mops morpholinopropanesulfonate - 1 U = 1 mol/min  相似文献   

20.
Ubiquinone (coenzyme Q10), in addition to its function as an electron and proton carrier in mitochondrial electron transport coupled to ATP synthesis, acts in its reduced form (ubiquinol) as an antioxidant, inhibiting lipid peroxidation in biological membranes and protecting mitochondrial inner-membrane proteins and DNA against oxidative damage accompanying lipid peroxidation. Tissue ubiquinone levels are subject to regulation by physiological factors that are related to the oxidative activity of the organism: they increase under the influence of oxidative stress, e.g. physical exercise, cold adaptation, thyroid hormone treatment, and decrease during aging. In the present study, coenzyme Q homologues were separated and quantified in the brains of mice, rats, rabbits, and chickens using high-performance liquid chromatography. In addition, the coenzyme Q homologues were measured in cells such as NG-108, PC-12, rat fetal brain cells and human SHSY-5Y and monocytes. In general, Q1 content was the lowest among the coenzyme homologues quantified in the brain. Q9 was not detectable in the brains of chickens and rabbits, but was present in the brains of rats and mice. Q9 was also not detected in human cell lines SHSY-5Y and monocytes. Q10 was detected in the brains of mice, rats, rabbits, and chickens and in cell lines. Since both coenzyme Q and vitamin E are antioxidants, and coenzyme Q recycles vitamins E and C, vitamin E was also quantified in mice brain using HPLC-electrochemical detector (ECD). The quantity of vitamin E was lowest in the substantia nigra compared with the other brain regions. This finding is crucial in elucidating ubiquinone function in bioenergetics; in preventing free radical generation, lipid peroxidation, and apoptosis in the brain; and as a potential compound in treating various neurodegenerative disorders.  相似文献   

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