linoleic-acid-hydroperoxide has been researched along with Stomach-Neoplasms* in 1 studies
1 other study(ies) available for linoleic-acid-hydroperoxide and Stomach-Neoplasms
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Similar metabolites formed from beta-carotene by human gastric mucosal homogenates, lipoxygenase, or linoleic acid hydroperoxide.
To determine the basis for the formation of excentric cleavage products of beta-carotene (beta-C) after incubation with human gastric mucosal homogenates, we have studied the effect of lipoxygenase in beta-C metabolism. beta-C was incubated with human gastric mucosal homogenates, soybean lipoxygenase with linoleic acid, or the lipoxygenase primary product, 13(S)-hydroperoxycis,trans-9,11-octadecadienoic acid (13-LOOH). The beta-C metabolites, beta-apo-14', -12', -10', and -8'-carotenals, beta-apo-13-carotenone, retinoic acid, and retinal were detected and quantified by HPLC after a 30-min incubation with 1.8 microM beta-C. The products from the lipoxygenase plus linoleic acid incubation and from the lipoxygenase primary product, 13-LOOH, with beta-C were exactly the same as the products from a human gastric mucosal homogenate incubation. Significantly larger amounts of the same beta-C metabolites were formed when beta-C was incubated with gastric mucosal homogenates and lipoxygenase together. Furthermore, nordihydroguaiaretic acid (NDGA), a specific lipoxygenase inhibitor, was found to significantly inhibit the formation of beta-apo-carotenoids and retinoids produced by gastric mucosal homogenates incubated with beta-C. The similarity of the beta-C metabolites when beta-C was incubated with human gastric mucosal homogenate, lipoxygenase plus linoleic acid, or 13-LOOH and the inhibition of beta-C metabolite production by NDGA in gastric tissue incubation with beta-C suggest that lipoxygenase is involved in beta-C metabolism in gastric mucosa. The activity of 13-LOOH in our hands would indicate that an enzyme-linked process is occurring in gastric tissue producing fatty acid hydroperoxides, and that the hydroperoxide, or a radical species derived from it, is able to carry out the oxidation of beta-C independently of the enzyme. Topics: beta Carotene; Biotransformation; Carotenoids; Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid; Gastric Mucosa; Glycine max; Humans; Linoleic Acids; Lipid Peroxides; Lipoxygenase; Reference Values; Stomach Neoplasms | 1995 |