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Mechanisms of lipid peroxide formation in animal tissues.

Wills Ed
- 01 Jun 1966 - 
- Vol. 99, Iss: 3, pp 667-676
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TLDR
Catalysis of peroxidation of unsaturated fatty acids by the mitochondrial and microsomal fractions of liver is inhibited by ascorbic acid at pH7.4 but the activity of the supernatant fraction is enhanced.
Abstract
1. Homogenates of rat liver, spleen, heart and kidney form lipid peroxides when incubated in vitro and actively catalyse peroxide formation in emulsions of linoleic acid or linolenic acid. 2. In liver, catalytic activity is distributed throughout the nuclear, mitochondrial and microsomal fractions and is present in the 100000g supernatant. Activity is weak in the nuclear fraction. 3. Dilute (0.5%, w/v) homogenates catalyse peroxidation over the range pH5.0-8.0 but concentrated (5%, w/v) homogenates inhibit peroxidation and destroy peroxide if the solution is more alkaline than pH7.0. 4. Ascorbic acid increases the rate of peroxidation of unsaturated fatty acids catalysed by whole homogenates of liver, heart, kidney and spleen at pH6.0 but not at pH7.4. 5. Catalysis of peroxidation of unsaturated fatty acids by the mitochondrial and microsomal fractions of liver is inhibited by ascorbic acid at pH7.4 but the activity of the supernatant fraction is enhanced. 6. Inorganic iron or ferritin are active catalysts in the presence of ascorbic acid. 7. Lipid peroxide formation in linoleic acid or linolenic acid emulsions catalysed by tissue homogenates is partially inhibited by EDTA but stimulated by o-phenanthroline. 8. Cysteine or glutathione (1mm) inhibits peroxide formation catalysed by whole homogenates, mitochondria or haemoprotein. Inhibition increases with increase of pH.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Assay for lipid peroxides in animal tissues by thiobarbituric acid reaction

TL;DR: Using this method, the liped peroxide level in the liver of rats suffering from carbon tetrachloride intoxication was investigated and was in good agreement with previously reported data obtained by measuring diene content.
Journal ArticleDOI

Role of metals in oxygen radical reactions

TL;DR: Factors such as pH and chelation govern the reactivity of the transition metals with dioxygen and "oxy-radicals" and therefore influence the apparent mechanisms by which oxidative damage to phospholipids, DNA, and other biomolecules is initiated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Catalytic metals, ascorbate and free radicals: combinations to avoid.

TL;DR: This presentation discusses the role of catalytic metals in free radical-mediated oxidations, ascorbate as both a pro-oxidant and an antioxidant, use of asCorbate to determine adventitious catalytic metal concentrations, and uses of ascorBate radical as a marker of oxidative stress.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inhibition of the iron-catalysed formation of hydroxyl radicals from superoxide and of lipid peroxidation by desferrioxamine

TL;DR: The iron chelator desferrioxamine inhibits peroxidation at all concentrations tested, and it also inhibits the iron-catalysed formation of hydroxyl radicals from superoxide (O2-.).
Journal ArticleDOI

Ferritin and superoxide-dependent lipid peroxidation.

TL;DR: Data suggest that ferritin may function in vivo as a source of iron for promotion of superoxide-dependent lipid peroxidation, and that initiation is not via an iron-catalyzed Haber-Weiss reaction.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Formation Of Peroxides In Tissue Lipids And Unsaturated Fatty Acids By Irradiation

TL;DR: Peroxide formation per gram tissue is similar to yields found in irradiated animals, and it is considered possible that peroxide formation in vivo may be a result of direct oxidation of unsaturated lipids by oxidizing radicals formed in the aqueous phase.
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