Comparative antioxidant activity of tocotrienols and other natural lipid-soluble antioxidants in a homogeneous system, and in rat and human lipoproteins

Suarna, C. ; Hood, R.L. ; Dean, R.T. ; Stocker, R.

Amsterdam : Elsevier
ISSN:
0005-2760
Keywords:
LDL ; Lipid peroxidation ; Nutrition ; Peroxyl radical ; Ubiquinol-10 ; Vitamin E
Source:
Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002
Topics:
Biology
Chemistry and Pharmacology
Medicine
Physics
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
_version_ 1798292212713259008
autor Suarna, C.
Hood, R.L.
Dean, R.T.
Stocker, R.
autorsonst Suarna, C.
Hood, R.L.
Dean, R.T.
Stocker, R.
book_url http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/0005-2760(93)90092-N
datenlieferant nat_lic_papers
fussnote The antioxidant activity of tocotrienols toward peroxyl radicals was compared with that of other natural lipid-soluble antioxidants in three different systems by measuring the temporal disappearance of antioxidants and the formation of lipid hydroperoxides. In homogeneous solution, the initial rates of consumption of the various antioxidants, assessed by competition experiments between pairs of antioxidants for radicals, decreased in the order: ubiquinol-10 ~ ubiquinol-9 α-tocopherol ~ α-tocotrienol ~ lycopene γ-tocopherol ~ γ-tocotrienol. Following in vitro incubation of human plasma with α-tocotrienol, this form of vitamin E was present in all classes of lipoproteins isolated from the supplemented plasma. Dietary supplementation of rats and humans with a tocotrienol-rich preparation resulted in a dose-dependent appearance of α- and γ-tocotrienols in plasma and all circulating lipoproteins, respectively. Exposure of such enriched rat plasma to aqueous peroxyl radicals resulted in simultaneous consumption of the α- and then γ-isomers of vitamin E. The sequence of radical-induced consumption of antioxidants in freshly isolated, in vitro and in vivo tocotrienol-enriched low density lipoprotein (LDL) was again ubiquinol-10 α-tocotrienol ~ α-tocopherol carotenoids γ-tocopherol ~ γ-tocotrienol. Under conditions where radicals were generated at constant rates, the rate of lipid hydroperoxide formation in LDL was not constant. It proceeded in at least three stages separated by the phase of ubiquinol-10 consumption and, subsequently, that of α-tocopherol/ α-tocotrienol. Our results show that dietary tocotrienols become incorporated into circulating human lipoproteins where they react with peroxyl radicals as efficiently as the corresponding tocopherol isomers.
hauptsatz hsatz_simple
identnr NLZ185860532
issn 0005-2760
journal_name Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA)/Lipids and Lipid Metabolism
materialart 1
package_name Elsevier
publikationsort Amsterdam
publisher Elsevier
reference 1166 (1993), S. 163-170
schlagwort LDL
Lipid peroxidation
Nutrition
Peroxyl radical
Ubiquinol-10
Vitamin E
search_space articles
shingle_author_1 Suarna, C.
Hood, R.L.
Dean, R.T.
Stocker, R.
shingle_author_2 Suarna, C.
Hood, R.L.
Dean, R.T.
Stocker, R.
shingle_author_3 Suarna, C.
Hood, R.L.
Dean, R.T.
Stocker, R.
shingle_author_4 Suarna, C.
Hood, R.L.
Dean, R.T.
Stocker, R.
shingle_catch_all_1 Suarna, C.
Hood, R.L.
Dean, R.T.
Stocker, R.
Comparative antioxidant activity of tocotrienols and other natural lipid-soluble antioxidants in a homogeneous system, and in rat and human lipoproteins
LDL
Lipid peroxidation
Nutrition
Peroxyl radical
Ubiquinol-10
Vitamin E
LDL
Lipid peroxidation
Nutrition
Peroxyl radical
Ubiquinol-10
Vitamin E
0005-2760
00052760
Elsevier
shingle_catch_all_2 Suarna, C.
Hood, R.L.
Dean, R.T.
Stocker, R.
Comparative antioxidant activity of tocotrienols and other natural lipid-soluble antioxidants in a homogeneous system, and in rat and human lipoproteins
LDL
Lipid peroxidation
Nutrition
Peroxyl radical
Ubiquinol-10
Vitamin E
LDL
Lipid peroxidation
Nutrition
Peroxyl radical
Ubiquinol-10
Vitamin E
0005-2760
00052760
Elsevier
shingle_catch_all_3 Suarna, C.
Hood, R.L.
Dean, R.T.
Stocker, R.
Comparative antioxidant activity of tocotrienols and other natural lipid-soluble antioxidants in a homogeneous system, and in rat and human lipoproteins
LDL
Lipid peroxidation
Nutrition
Peroxyl radical
Ubiquinol-10
Vitamin E
LDL
Lipid peroxidation
Nutrition
Peroxyl radical
Ubiquinol-10
Vitamin E
0005-2760
00052760
Elsevier
shingle_catch_all_4 Suarna, C.
Hood, R.L.
Dean, R.T.
Stocker, R.
Comparative antioxidant activity of tocotrienols and other natural lipid-soluble antioxidants in a homogeneous system, and in rat and human lipoproteins
LDL
Lipid peroxidation
Nutrition
Peroxyl radical
Ubiquinol-10
Vitamin E
LDL
Lipid peroxidation
Nutrition
Peroxyl radical
Ubiquinol-10
Vitamin E
0005-2760
00052760
Elsevier
shingle_title_1 Comparative antioxidant activity of tocotrienols and other natural lipid-soluble antioxidants in a homogeneous system, and in rat and human lipoproteins
shingle_title_2 Comparative antioxidant activity of tocotrienols and other natural lipid-soluble antioxidants in a homogeneous system, and in rat and human lipoproteins
shingle_title_3 Comparative antioxidant activity of tocotrienols and other natural lipid-soluble antioxidants in a homogeneous system, and in rat and human lipoproteins
shingle_title_4 Comparative antioxidant activity of tocotrienols and other natural lipid-soluble antioxidants in a homogeneous system, and in rat and human lipoproteins
sigel_instance_filter dkfz
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wilbert
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source_archive Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002
timestamp 2024-05-06T08:44:56.497Z
titel Comparative antioxidant activity of tocotrienols and other natural lipid-soluble antioxidants in a homogeneous system, and in rat and human lipoproteins
titel_suche Comparative antioxidant activity of tocotrienols and other natural lipid-soluble antioxidants in a homogeneous system, and in rat and human lipoproteins
The antioxidant activity of tocotrienols toward peroxyl radicals was compared with that of other natural lipid-soluble antioxidants in three different systems by measuring the temporal disappearance of antioxidants and the formation of lipid hydroperoxides. In homogeneous solution, the initial rates of consumption of the various antioxidants, assessed by competition experiments between pairs of antioxidants for radicals, decreased in the order: ubiquinol-10 ~ ubiquinol-9 α-tocopherol ~ α-tocotrienol ~ lycopene γ-tocopherol ~ γ-tocotrienol. Following in vitro incubation of human plasma with α-tocotrienol, this form of vitamin E was present in all classes of lipoproteins isolated from the supplemented plasma. Dietary supplementation of rats and humans with a tocotrienol-rich preparation resulted in a dose-dependent appearance of α- and γ-tocotrienols in plasma and all circulating lipoproteins, respectively. Exposure of such enriched rat plasma to aqueous peroxyl radicals resulted in simultaneous consumption of the α- and then γ-isomers of vitamin E. The sequence of radical-induced consumption of antioxidants in freshly isolated, in vitro and in vivo tocotrienol-enriched low density lipoprotein (LDL) was again ubiquinol-10 α-tocotrienol ~ α-tocopherol carotenoids γ-tocopherol ~ γ-tocotrienol. Under conditions where radicals were generated at constant rates, the rate of lipid hydroperoxide formation in LDL was not constant. It proceeded in at least three stages separated by the phase of ubiquinol-10 consumption and, subsequently, that of α-tocopherol/ α-tocotrienol. Our results show that dietary tocotrienols become incorporated into circulating human lipoproteins where they react with peroxyl radicals as efficiently as the corresponding tocopherol isomers.
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