ascorbic-acid and 2-keto-4-methylthiobutyric-acid

ascorbic-acid has been researched along with 2-keto-4-methylthiobutyric-acid* in 5 studies

Other Studies

5 other study(ies) available for ascorbic-acid and 2-keto-4-methylthiobutyric-acid

ArticleYear
Antioxidants and total oxyradical scavenging capacity during grass shrimp, Palaemonetes pugio, embryogenesis.
    Comparative biochemistry and physiology. Toxicology & pharmacology : CBP, 2004, Volume: 139, Issue:4

    During embryogenesis in grass shrimp the capacity to scavenge oxyradicals increased as measured by the Total Oxyradical Scavenging Capacity (TOSC) assay. The increase in TOSC during embryogenesis was associated with increasing concentrations of a number of antioxidants, including coenzyme Q (ubiquinone), alpha-tocopherol and reduced glutathione. Glutathione concentrations ranged from 0.004 to 0.005 nmol/embryo in early embryo stages and reached concentrations between 0.16 to 0.23 nmol/embryo in late embryo stages. Ascorbate remained essentially constant (0.16-0.20 nmol/embryo) throughout embryogenesis and may provide the preponderance of TOSC during early embryo development. Carotenoids were associated with yolk lipovitellin and these antioxidants decreased as yolk was absorbed during embryogenesis. Astaxanthin and beta-carotene were identified in embryos with astaxanthin always the principal carotenoid. In early embryo stages there are maternally derived antioxidants but as embryogenesis proceeds there is an assembly of a complex antioxidant system by newly formed cells and tissues.

    Topics: alpha-Tocopherol; Animals; Antioxidants; Ascorbic Acid; Coenzymes; Female; Glutathione; Methionine; Palaemonidae; Peroxides; Reactive Oxygen Species; Ubiquinone; Xanthophylls

2004
Quantification of total oxidant scavenging capacity of antioxidants for peroxynitrite, peroxyl radicals, and hydroxyl radicals.
    Toxicology and applied pharmacology, 1999, Apr-15, Volume: 156, Issue:2

    We have extended the application of our previously reported total oxidant scavenging capacity (TOSC) assay (Winston et al., Free Radical Biol. Med. 24, 480-493, 1998) to permit facile quantification of the absorbance capacity of antioxidants toward three potent oxidants, i.e., hydroxyl radicals, peroxyl radicals, and peroxynitrite. Respectively, these oxidants were generated by the iron plus ascorbate-driven Fenton reaction, thermal homolysis of 2,2'-azobis(2-methylpropionamidine) dihydrochloride (ABAP), and 3-morpholinosydnonimine N-ethylcarbamide (SIN-1). Each of these oxidants reacts with alpha-keto-gamma-methiolbutyric acid (KMBA), which is oxidized and yields ethylene. The antioxidant capacity of the compounds tested is quantified from their ability to inhibit ethylene formation relative to a control reaction. Assay conditions were established in which control reactions give comparable yields of ethylene with each of the oxidants studied. Thus, the relative efficiency of various antioxidants could be compared under conditions of quantitatively similar KMBA oxidizing capability by the three oxidants. Reduced glutathione was an efficient scavenger of peroxyl radicals, but scavenged peroxynitrite and hydroxyl radicals relatively poorly. Uric acid, Trolox, and ascorbic acid were comparable scavengers of peroxynitrite and peroxyl radicals. Uric acid and Trolox were approximately an order of magnitude less efficient as scavengers of hydroxyl radicals. The classical hydroxyl radical scavenging agents mannitol, dimethyl sulfoxide, and benzoic acid had much higher TOSC values with hydroxyl than with peroxyl radicals or peroxynitrite. The very different chemical reactivity toward KMBA by the SIN-1- and iron-ascorbate-generated oxidants indicates that hydroxyl radical is not a major oxidant produced by the SIN-1 system. The data show that the TOSC assay is useful and robust in distinguishing the reactivity of various oxidants and the relative capacities of antioxidants to scavenge these oxidants.

    Topics: Amidines; Antioxidants; Ascorbic Acid; Chromatography, Gas; Free Radical Scavengers; Free Radicals; Hydroxyl Radical; Methionine; Molsidomine; Nitrates; Nitric Oxide Donors; Oxidants; Oxidation-Reduction; Peroxides

1999
Oxidative destruction of biomolecules by gasoline engine exhaust products and detoxifying effects of the three-way catalytic converter.
    Archives of toxicology, 1992, Volume: 66, Issue:10

    Aqueous solutions of engine exhaust condensation products were derived from cars powered by diesel or four-stroke gasoline engines (with and without three-way catalytic converter). The cars were operated on a static test platform. Samples of the different exhaust solutions accumulated in a Grimmer-type distillation trap (VDI 3872) during standard test programs (Federal Test Procedure) were incubated with important biomolecules. As indicators of reactive oxygen species or oxidative destruction, ascorbic acid, cysteine, glutathione, serum albumin, the enzymes glycerinaldehyde phosphate dehydrogenase and xanthine oxidase, and the oxygen free-radical indicator keto-methylthiobutyrate were used. During and after the incubations, oxygen activation (consumption) and oxidative destruction were determined. Comparison of the oxidative activities of the different types of exhaust condensates clearly showed that the exhaust condensate derived from the four-stroke car equipped with a three-way catalytic converter exhibited by far the lowest oxidative and destructive power.

    Topics: Antioxidants; Ascorbic Acid; Automobiles; Carotenoids; Ethylenes; Gasoline; Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate Dehydrogenases; Methionine; Oxidation-Reduction; Reactive Oxygen Species; Serum Albumin, Bovine; Sulfhydryl Compounds; Vehicle Emissions; Xanthine Oxidase

1992
Manganese complexes and the generation and scavenging of hydroxyl free radicals.
    Free radical biology & medicine, 1988, Volume: 5, Issue:5-6

    In a wide variety of biological systems non-enzyme complexes of the metals copper (Cu) and iron (Fe) have been shown to enhance oxygen radical damage by increasing the production of an oxidative species generally believed to be the hydroxyl free radical (.OH) via "Fenton" and possibly "Haber-Weiss" type reactions. However, the behavior of the chemically and biologically similar transition metal manganese (Mn) with .OH is unknown. Unlike Fe and Cu, inorganic complexes of Mn are known to exist in high concentrations in certain cells. Three different oxygen free radical generating systems and four .OH detection methods were used to investigate the activity of biologically relevant inorganic Mn complexes. These complexes were compared to compounds reported to scavenge and generate .OH. The direct and indirect effects of Mn on the .OH flux were compared by attempting to distinguish the effects of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), superoxide (O2-), and .OH through the use of selective scavengers and generators. Mn-EDTA and biologically relevant Mn-pyrophosphates and polyphosphates, in contrast to Fe-EDTA, do not generate .OH in these systems. The results suggest that Mn in various forms does, indeed, inhibit oxy-radical damage mediated by .OH, but only if the .OH production is dependent on the presence of O2- or H2O2. Thus, with .OH, as with O2- and H2O2, Mn complexes appear to behave in a fundamentally different fashion from Cu and Fe.

    Topics: Ascorbic Acid; Chemical Phenomena; Chemistry; Diphosphates; DNA Damage; DNA, Bacterial; Edetic Acid; Ethylenes; Ferric Compounds; Free Radicals; Hydrogen Peroxide; Hydroxides; Hydroxyl Radical; Iron; Magnesium; Magnesium Compounds; Manganese; Mannitol; Methionine; Plasmids; Polyphosphates; Superoxides; Xanthine Oxidase

1988
Hydroxyl radicals and the toxicity of oral iron.
    Biochemical pharmacology, 1986, Feb-15, Volume: 35, Issue:4

    Topics: Administration, Oral; Animals; Ascorbic Acid; Ethylenes; Female; Ferrous Compounds; Free Radicals; Hydroxides; Hydroxyl Radical; Iron; Methionine; Oxidation-Reduction; Rats; Rats, Inbred Strains

1986