hexacyanoferrate-iii and diethyl-maleate

hexacyanoferrate-iii has been researched along with diethyl-maleate* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for hexacyanoferrate-iii and diethyl-maleate

ArticleYear
Mitochondrial recycling of ascorbic acid as a mechanism for regenerating cellular ascorbate.
    BioFactors (Oxford, England), 2007, Volume: 30, Issue:1

    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.

    Topics: alpha-Tocopherol; Animals; Arsenicals; Ascorbic Acid; Carmustine; Dehydroascorbic Acid; Diamide; Ethylmaleimide; Ferricyanides; Guinea Pigs; In Vitro Techniques; Maleates; Mitochondria, Muscle; Oxidation-Reduction; Sulfhydryl Reagents

2007
Human erythrocyte recycling of ascorbic acid: relative contributions from the ascorbate free radical and dehydroascorbic acid.
    The Journal of biological chemistry, 2004, Apr-09, Volume: 279, Issue:15

    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.

    Topics: Ascorbic Acid; Cell Membrane; Dehydroascorbic Acid; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Erythrocytes; Ferricyanides; Free Radicals; Glucose; Glutathione; Humans; Maleates; Models, Biological; NAD; NADP; Oxidants; Oxygen; Stress, Physiological; Time Factors

2004