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1.
Reduction and uptake of methylene blue by human erythrocytes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A thiazine dye reductase has been described in endothelial cells that reduces methylene blue (MB), allowing its uptake into cells. Because a different mechanism of MB uptake in human erythrocytes has been proposed, we measured MB uptake and reduction in this cell type. Oxidized MB (MB+) stimulated reduction of extracellular ferricyanide in a time- and concentration-dependent manner, reflecting extracellular reduction of the dye. Reduced MB was then taken up by the cells and partially oxidized to MB+. Both forms were retained against a concentration gradient, and their redox cycling induced an oxidant stress in the cells. Whereas concentrations of MB+ <5 µM selectively oxidized NAD(P)H, higher concentrations also oxidized both glutathione (GSH) and ascorbate, especially in the absence of D-glucose. MB+-stimulated ferricyanide reduction was inhibited by thiol reagents with different mechanisms of action. Phenylarsine oxide, which is selective for vicinal dithiols in proteins, inhibited MB+-dependent ferricyanide reduction more strongly than it decreased cell GSH and pentose phosphate cycle activity, and it did not affect cellular NADPH. Open erythrocyte ghost membranes facilitated saturable NAD(P)H oxidation by MB+, which was abolished by pretreating ghosts with low concentrations of trypsin and phenylarsine oxide. These results show that erythrocytes sequentially reduce and take up MB+, that both reduced and oxidized forms of the dye are concentrated in cells, and that the thiazine dye reductase activity initially responsible for MB+ reduction may correspond to MB+-dependent NAD(P)H reductase activity in erythrocyte ghosts. thiazine dyes; ascorbic acid; ferricyanide; phenylarsine oxide; oxidant stress; redox cycling  相似文献   

2.
The uptake, recycling, and function of ascorbic acid was evaluated in cultured U-937 monocytic cells. Dehydroascorbic acid, the two-electron oxidized form of the vitamin, was taken up on the glucose transporter and reduced to ascorbate to a much greater extent than ascorbate itself was accumulated by the cells. In contrast to dehydroascorbic acid, ascorbate entered the cells on a sodium- and energy-dependent transporter. Intracellular ascorbate enhanced the transfer of electrons across the cell membrane to extracellular ferricyanide. Rates of ascorbate-dependent ferricyanide reduction were saturable, fivefold greater than basal rates, and facilitated by intracellular recycling of ascorbate. Whereas reduction of dehydroascorbic acid concentrations above 400 microM consumed reduced glutathione (GSH), even severe GSH depletion by 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene was without effect on the ability of the cells to reduce concentrations of dehydroascorbic acid likely to be in the physiologic range (< 200 microM). Dialyzed cytosolic fractions from U-937 cells reduced dehydroascorbic acid to ascorbate in an NADPH-dependent manner that appeared due to thioredoxin reductase. However, thioredoxin reductase did not account for the bulk of dehydroascorbic acid reduction, since its activity was also decreased by treatment of intact cells with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene. Thus, U-937 cells loaded with dehydroascorbic acid accumulate ascorbate against a concentration gradient via a mechanism that is not dependent on GSH or NADPH, and this ascorbate can serve as the major source of electrons for transfer across the plasma membrane to extracellular ferricyanide.  相似文献   

3.
Endothelial cells encounter oxidant stress due to their location in the vascular wall, and because they generate reactive nitrogen species. Because ascorbic acid is likely involved in the antioxidant defenses of these cells, we studied the mechanisms by which cultures of EA.hy926 endothelial cells recycle the vitamin from its oxidized forms. Cell lysates reduced the ascorbate free radical (AFR) by both NADH- and NADPH-dependent mechanisms. Most NADH-dependent AFR reduction occurred in the particulate fraction of the cells. NADPH-dependent reduction resembled that due to NADH in having a high affinity for the AFR, but was mediated largely by thioredoxin reductase. Reduction of dehydroascorbic acid (DHA) required GSH and was both direct and enzyme dependent. The latter was saturable, half-maximal at 100 microM DHA, and comparable to rates of AFR reduction. Loading cells to ascorbate concentrations of 0.3-1.6 mM generated intracellular DHA concentrations of 20-30 microM, indicative of oxidant stress in culture. Whereas high-affinity AFR reduction is the initial and likely the preferred mechanism of ascorbate recycling, any DHA that accumulates during oxidant stress will be reduced by GSH-dependent mechanisms.  相似文献   

4.
Alpha-lipoic acid, which becomes a powerful antioxidant in its reduced form, has been suggested as a dietary supplement to treat diseases associated with excessive oxidant stress. Because the vascular endothelium is dysfunctional in many of these conditions, we studied the uptake, reduction, and antioxidant effects of alpha-lipoic acid in cultured human endothelial cells (EA.hy926). Using a new assay for dihydrolipoic acid, we found that EA.hy926 cells rapidly take up and reduce alpha-lipoic acid to dihydrolipoic acid, most of which is released into the incubation medium. Nonetheless, the cells maintain dihydrolipoic acid following overnight culture, probably by recycling it from alpha-lipoic acid. Acute reduction of alpha-lipoic acid activates the pentose phosphate cycle and consumes nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH). Lysates of EA.hy926 cells reduce alpha-lipoic acid using both NADPH and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) as electron donors, although NADPH-dependent reduction is about twice that due to NADH. NADPH-dependent alpha-lipoic acid reduction is mostly due to thioredoxin reductase. Pre-incubation of cells with alpha-lipoic acid increases their capacity to reduce extracellular ferricyanide, to recycle intracellular dehydroascorbic acid to ascorbate, to decrease reactive oxygen species generated by redox cycling of menadione, and to generate nitric oxide. These results show that alpha-lipoic acid enhances both the antioxidant defenses and the function of endothelial cells.  相似文献   

5.
Recycling of ascorbic acid from its oxidized forms helps to maintain the vitamin in human erythrocytes. To determine the relative contributions of recycling from the ascorbate radical and dehydroascorbic acid, we studied erythrocytes exposed to a trans-membrane oxidant stress from ferricyanide. Ferricyanide was used both to induce oxidant stress across the cell membrane and to quantify ascorbate recycling. Erythrocytes reduced ferricyanide with generation of intracellular ascorbate radical, the concentrations of which saturated with increasing intracellular ascorbate and which were sustained over time in cells incubated with glucose. Ferricyanide also generated dehydroascorbic acid that accumulated in the cells and incubation medium to concentrations much higher than those of the radical, especially in the absence of glucose. Ferricyanide-stimulated ascorbate recycling from dehydroascorbic acid depended on intracellular GSH but was well maintained at the expense of intracellular ascorbate when GSH was severely depleted by diethylmaleate. This likely reflects continued radical reduction, which is not dependent on GSH. Erythrocyte hemolysates showed both NAD- and NADPH-dependent ascorbate radical reduction. The latter was partially due to thioredoxin reductase. GSH-dependent dehydroascorbate reduction in hemolysates, which was both direct and enzyme-dependent, was greater than that of the radical reductase activity but of lower apparent affinity. Together, these results suggest an efficient two-tiered system in which high affinity reduction of the ascorbate radical is sufficient to remove low concentrations of the radical that might be encountered by cells not under oxidant stress, with back-up by a high capacity system for reducing dehydroascorbate under conditions of more severe oxidant stress.  相似文献   

6.
X Li  K E Hill  R F Burk  J M May 《FEBS letters》2001,508(3):489-492
The selenoenzyme thioredoxin reductase (TR) can recycle ascorbic acid, which in turn can recycle alpha-tocopherol. Therefore, we evaluated the role of selenium in ascorbic acid recycling and in protection against oxidant-induced loss of alpha-tocopherol in cultured liver cells. Treatment of HepG2 or H4IIE cultured liver cells for 48 h with sodium selenite (0-116 nmol/l) tripled the activity of the selenoenzyme TR, measured as aurothioglucose-sensitive dehydroascorbic acid (DHA) reduction. However, selenium did not increase the ability of H4IIE cells to take up and reduce 2 mM DHA, despite a 25% increase in ascorbate-dependent ferricyanide reduction (which reflects cellular ascorbate recycling). Nonetheless, selenium supplements both spared ascorbate in overnight cultures of H4IIE cells, and prevented loss of cellular alpha-tocopherol in response to an oxidant stress induced by either ferricyanide or diazobenzene sulfonate. Whereas TR contributes little to ascorbate recycling in H4IIE cells, selenium spares ascorbate in culture and alpha-tocopherol in response to an oxidant stress.  相似文献   

7.
Ascorbic acid is necessary for optimal insulin secretion from pancreatic islets. We evaluated ascorbate recycling and whether it is impaired by increased glucose metabolism in the rat beta-cell line INS-1. INS-1 cells, engineered with the potential for overexpression of glucokinase under the control of a tetracycline-inducible gene expression system, took up and reduced dehydroascorbic acid to ascorbate in a concentration-dependent manner that was optimal in the presence of physiologic D-glucose concentrations. Ascorbate uptake did not affect intracellular GSH concentrations. Whereas depletion of GSH in culture to levels about 25% of normal also did not affect the ability of the cells to reduce dehydroascorbic acid, more severe acute GSH depletion to less than 10% of normal levels did impair dehydroascorbic acid reduction. Culture of inducible cells in 11.8 mM D-glucose and doxycycline for 48 h enhanced glucokinase activity, increased glucose utilization, abolished D-glucose-dependent insulin secretion, and increased generation of reactive oxygen species. The latter may have contributed to subsequent decreases in the ability of the cells both to maintain intracellular ascorbate and to recycle it from dehydroascorbic acid. Cultured beta cells have a high capacity to recycle ascorbate, but this is sensitive to oxidant stress generated by increased glucose metabolism due to culture in high glucose concentrations and increased glucokinase expression. Impaired ascorbate recycling as a result of increased glucose metabolism may have implications for the role of ascorbate in insulin secretion in diabetes mellitus and may partially explain glucose toxicity in beta cells.  相似文献   

8.
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.  相似文献   

9.
To test whether ascorbic acid might be involved in the antioxidant defenses of inflammatory cells, we studied ascorbate uptake and recycling by quiescent and lipopolysaccharide-activated RAW264.7 murine macrophages. These cells concentrated ascorbate 100-fold in overnight culture, achieving steady-state concentrations of more than 10 mM at extracellular concentrations of 20-100 muM. This steep gradient was generated by high-affinity sodium-dependent ascorbate transport. The latter likely reflects function of the SVCT2 (SLC23A2), since this protein was detected on immunoblots. Dehydroascorbate, the two-electron oxidized form of ascorbate, was also taken up and reduced to ascorbate by the cells. Dehydroascorbate reduction required rapid recycling of GSH from GSSG by glutathione reductase. Activation of ascorbate-containing macrophages with lipopolysaccharide transiently depleted intracellular ascorbate without affecting GSH. Recovery of intracellular ascorbate required function of the SVCT2 transporter, the activity of which was modestly enhanced by lipopolysaccharide. Lipopolysaccharide treatment nearly doubled intracellular GSH concentrations over 2 h. Despite lipopolysaccharide-induced oxidant stress, this GSH increase was associated with a comparable increase in reduction of dehydroascorbate to ascorbate. These results show that macrophages maintain millimolar concentrations of ascorbate through function of the SVCT2 and that activated cells have an enhanced ability to transport and recycle ascorbate, possibly reflecting its role as an intracellular antioxidant.  相似文献   

10.
Mitochondria are the major source of potentially damaging reactive oxygen species in most cells. Since ascorbic acid, or vitamin C, can protect against cellular oxidant stress, we studied the ability of mitochondria prepared from guinea pig skeletal muscle to recycle the vitamin from its oxidized forms. Although ascorbate concentrations in freshly prepared mitochondria were only about 0.2 mM, when provided with 6 mM succinate and 1 mM dehydroascorbate (the two-electron-oxidized form of the vitamin), mitochondria were able to generate and maintain concentrations as high as 4 mM, while releasing most of the ascorbate into the incubation medium. Mitochondrial reduction of dehydroascorbate was strongly inhibited by 1,3-bis(chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea and by phenylarsine oxide. Despite existing evidence that mitochondrial ascorbate protects the organelle from oxidant damage, ascorbate failed to preserve mitochondrial alpha-tocopherol during prolonged incubation in oxygenated buffer. Nonetheless, the capacity for mitochondria to recycle ascorbate from its oxidized forms, measured as ascorbate-dependent ferricyanide reduction, was several-fold greater than total steady-state ascorbate concentrations. This, and the finding that more than half of the ascorbate recycled from dehydroascorbate escaped the mitochondrion, suggests that mitochondrial recycling of ascorbate might be an important mechanism for regenerating intracellular ascorbate.  相似文献   

11.
To determine the reductive process of extracellular dehydroascorbic acid (DHA), molecules (homocysteine, homocysteine thiolactone, methionine, cysteine, and homoserine) were tested to identify those with the potential to reduce DHA to ascorbic acid (AA). Homocysteine (Hcy) was the most potent of the molecules tested. The efficacy of Hcy was compared with that of other molecules able to reduce DHA (reduced glutathione (GSH) and cysteine (Cy)). Although all three molecules were able to reduce DHA, GSH and Cy were not to reduce DHA to AA at concentrations lower than 100 micromol/l, and only less than 5% DHA was reduced to AA at concentrations of 200-300 micromol/l. In contrast, Hcy reduced DHA to AA stoichiometrically at concentrations as low as 10 micromol/l. In Jurkat and U937 cells, the increasing concentrations of extracellular Hcy suppressed intracellular dehydroascorbic acid uptake, indicating that extracellular reduction of DHA by Hcy leads to decreasing extracellular DHA available for its intracellular uptake. Simultaneous oxidation and reduction of Hcy and DHA were accelerated extracellularly in the presence of quercetin, an inhibitor of DHA uptake, suggesting that extracellular ascorbic acid concentration increased via blocking DHA uptake by quercetin and reducing extracellular DHA by Hcy. The effect of homocysteine on DHA reduction and uptake was confirmed with human umbilical vein endothelial cells. The oxidation of Hcy also prevented the decrease in DNA synthesis in human umbilical vein endothelial cells, which would occur following exposure to Hcy.  相似文献   

12.
Experiments were performed to evaluate the nonenzymatic reaction between glutathione (GSH) and dehydroascorbic acid (DHA). Though both ascorbic acid and glutathione disulfide (GSSG) are formed from this reaction, previous work has focused almost exclusively on measurements of ascorbic acid. In contrast, there is very little information about the formation of GSSG under the same conditions as those used to produce ascorbic acid. The emphasis on ascorbic acid stems from the fact that a spectrophotometric technique is available for its measurement, whereas 1H-NMR or an amino acid analyzer has been used to measure GSSG. The present experiments use a simple, rapid method for accurately and precisely measuring the concentrations of GSSG in a solution. The spectrophotometric (340 nm) procedure uses NADPH and glutathione reductase; analysis time is very short, many replicate samples can be tested and as little as 0.05-0.1 mM GSSG can be detected. Using this method, it is shown that there is an equimolar production of GSSG and ascorbic acid from GSH and DHA and that the decrease in GSH is stoichiometrically related to the increase in the concentration of GSSG. The present findings provide additional insight into the interaction between the GSH/GSSG redox couple and the ascorbic acid/DHA redox couple.  相似文献   

13.
The reaction of deoxyhemoglobin with nitric oxide (NO) or nitrite ions (NO 2 (-)) produces iron-nitrosyl-hemoglobin (HbNO) in contrast to the reaction with oxyhemoglobin, which produces methemoglobin and nitrate (NO 3 (-)). HbNO has not been associated with the known bioactivities of NO. We hypothesized that HbNO in erythrocytes could be an important source of bioactive NO/nitrite if its oxidation was coupled to the ascorbic acid (ASC) cycle. Studied by absorption and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, DHA oxidized HbNO to methemoglobin and liberated NO from HbNO as determined by chemiluminescence. Both DHA and ascorbate free radical (AFR), the intermediate between ASC and DHA, enhanced NO oxidation to nitrite, but not nitrate; nor did either oxidize nitrite to nitrate. DHA increased the basal levels of nitrite in erythrocytes, while the reactions of nitrite with hemoglobin are slow. In erythrocytes loaded with HbNO, HbNO disappeared after DHA addition, and the AFR signal was detected by EPR. We suggest that the ASC-AFR-DHA cycle may be coupled to that of HbNO-nitrite and provide a mechanism for the endocrine transport of NO via hemoglobin within erythrocytes, resulting in the production of intracellular nitrite. Additionally, intracellular nitrite and nitrate seem to be largely generated by independent pathways within the erythrocyte. These data provide a physiologically robust mechanism for erythrocytic transport of NO bioactivity allowing for hormone-like properties.  相似文献   

14.
Homogeneous native and recombinant porcine liver thioltransferase (glutaredoxin), bovine thymus and human placenta thioltransferase (glutaredoxin) were examined for dehydroascorbate reductase activity (EC 1.8.5.1) involving the direct catalytic reduction of dehydroascorbic acid (DHA) by glutathione. Each enzyme had substantial activity with apparent Km and Vmax for dehydroascorbate between 0.2 and 2.2 mM and 6-27 nmol min-1, respectively, and for gluathione between 1.6 and 8.7 mM and 11-30 nmol min-1, respectively. In the presence of purified bovine liver thioredoxin reductase, homogeneous bovine liver thioredoxin failed to reduce DHA to ascorbic acid as measured by NADPH oxidation. Highly purified bovine liver protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) reacted directly with DHA and GSH to catalyze the reduction of DHA to ascorbic acid. The apparent Km for DHA was 1.0 mM and the Vmax was 8 nmol min-1, and for GSH were 3.9 mM and 14 nmol min-1, respectively. These results suggest that thioltransferase and PDI contribute to the regeneration of oxidized ascorbic acid in mammalian cells, and based on their cellular location, thioltransferase is proposed to be the major cytoplasmic activity, whereas interaction of DHA with microsomal membrane PDI may catalyze regeneration of ascorbic acid and initiate oxidation of intralumenal protein thiols to disulfides.  相似文献   

15.
Stable nitroxide radicals have been considered as therapeutic antioxidants because they can scavenge more toxic radicals in biologic systems. However, as radicals they also have the potential to increase oxidant stress in cells and tissues. We studied the extent to which this occurs in cultured EA.hy926 endothelial cells exposed to the nitroxide Tempol (4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-N-oxyl). Tempol was rapidly reduced by the cells, as manifest by an increase in the ability of the cells to reduce extracellular ferricyanide and by disappearance of the Tempol EPR signal. Cells loaded with ascorbic acid, which directly reacts with Tempol, showed increased rates of Tempol-dependent ferricyanide reduction, and a more rapid loss of the Tempol EPR signal than cells not containing ascorbate. In this process, intracellular ascorbate was oxidized, and was depleted at lower Tempol concentrations than was GSH, another important intracellular low molecular weight antioxidant. Further evidence that Tempol concentrations of 100-1000 μM induced an oxidant stress was that it caused an increase in the oxidation of dihydrofluorescein in cells and inhibited ascorbate transport at concentrations as low as 50-100 μM. The presence of intracellular ascorbate both prevented dihydrofluorescein oxidation and spared GSH from oxidation by Tempol. Such sparing was not observed when GSH was depleted by other mechanisms, indicating that it was likely due to protection against oxidant stress. These results show that whereas Tempol may scavenge other more toxic radicals, care must be taken to ensure that it does not itself induce an oxidant stress, especially with regard to depletion of ascorbic acid.  相似文献   

16.
Neurons maintain relatively high intracellular concentrations of vitamin C, or ascorbic acid. In this work we studied the mechanisms by which neuronal cells in culture transport and maintain ascorbate, as well as how this system responds to oxidant stress induced by glutamate. Cultured SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells took up ascorbate, achieving steady-state intracellular concentrations of 6 mM and higher at extracellular concentrations of 200 μM and greater. This gradient was generated by relatively high affinity sodium-dependent ascorbate transport (K m of 113 μM). Ascorbate was also recycled from dehydroascorbate, the reduction of which was dependent on GSH, but not on d-glucose. Glutamate in concentrations up to 2 mM caused an acute concentration-dependent efflux of ascorbate from the cells, which was prevented by the anion channel blocker 4,4′-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2′-disulfonic acid. Intracellular ascorbate did not affect radiolabeled glutamate uptake, showing absence of heteroexchange.  相似文献   

17.
Erythrocytes, suspended in a glucose-containing buffer, catalyzed the partial reduction of extracellular methemoglobin. Physiological concentrations of ascorbic acid or dehydroascorbic acid greatly enhanced the rate of reaction and the ultimate extent of reduction. The relationship between erythrocyte concentration and initial reaction rate was nonlinear, which suggested that the rate limiting factor was not an erythrocyte membrane enzyme. Also, significant dehydroascorbate-stimulated reduction occurred even when the erythrocytes and methemoglobin were separated by a dialysis membrane. The above observations indicate that the transfer of reducing equivalents across the erythrocyte membrane and reduction of extracellular methemoglobin can be accomplished by release and recycling of ascorbic acid.  相似文献   

18.
Reduction of the ascorbate free radical (AFR) at the plasma membrane provides an efficient mechanism to preserve the vitamin in a location where it can recycle alpha-tocopherol and thus prevent lipid peroxidation. Erythrocyte ghost membranes have been shown to oxidize NADH in the presence of the AFR. We report that this activity derives from an AFR reductase because it spares ascorbate from oxidation by ascorbate oxidase, and because ghost membranes decrease steady-state concentrations of the AFR in a protein- and NADH-dependent manner. The AFR reductase has a high apparent affinity for both NADH and the AFR (< 2 microM). When measured in open ghosts, the reductase is comprised of an inner membrane activity (both substrate sites on the cytosolic membrane face) and a trans-membrane activity that mediates extracellular AFR reduction using intracellular NADH. However, the trans-membrane activity constitutes only about 12% of the total measured in ghosts. Ghost AFR reductase activity can also be differentiated from NADH-dependent ferricyanide reductase(s) by its sensitivity to the detergent Triton X-100 and insensitivity to enzymatic digestion with cathepsin D. This NADH-dependent AFR reductase could serve to recycle ascorbic acid at a crucial site on the inner face of the plasma membrane.  相似文献   

19.
Endothelial cells are exposed to potentially damaging reactive oxygen species generated both within the cells and in the bloodstream and underlying vessel wall. In this work, we studied the ability of ascorbic acid to protect cultured human-derived endothelial cells (EA.hy926) from oxidant stress generated by the redox cycling agent menadione. Menadione caused intracellular oxidation of dihydrofluorescein, which required the presence of D-glucose in the incubation medium, and was inhibited by intracellular ascorbate and desferrioxamine. At concentrations of 100 microM and higher, menadione depleted the cells of both GSH and ascorbate, and ascorbate loading partially prevented the decrease in GSH due to menadione. Menadione increased L-arginine uptake by the cells, but inhibited endothelial nitric oxide synthase, an effect that was prevented by acute loading with ascorbate. Ascorbate blunts menadione-induced oxidant stress in EA.hy926 cells, which may help to preserve nitric oxide synthase activity under conditions of excessive oxidant stress.  相似文献   

20.
Human erythrocytes contain an unidentified plasma membrane redox system that can reduce extracellular monodehydroascorbate by using intracellular ascorbate (Asc) as an electron donor. Here we show that human erythrocyte membranes contain a cytochrome b(561) (Cyt b(561)) and hypothesize that it may be responsible for this activity. Of three evolutionarily closely related Cyts b(561), immunoblots of human erythrocyte membranes showed only the duodenal cytochrome b(561) (DCytb) isoform. DCytb was also found in guinea pig erythrocyte membranes but not in erythrocyte membranes from the mouse or rat. Mouse erythrocytes lost a majority of the DCytb in the late erythroblast stage during erythropoiesis. Absorption spectroscopy showed that human erythrocyte membranes contain an Asc-reducible b-type Cyt having the same spectral characteristics as recombinant DCytb and biphasic reduction kinetics, similar to those of the chromaffin granule Cyt b(561). In contrast, mouse erythrocytes did not exhibit Asc-reducible b-type Cyt activity. Furthermore, in contrast to mouse erythrocytes, human erythrocytes much more effectively preserved extracellular Asc and transferred electrons from intracellular Asc to extracellular ferricyanide. These results suggest that the DCytb present in human erythrocytes may contribute to their ability to reduce extracellular monodehydroascorbate.  相似文献   

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