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Prevention of Tocopherol-mediated Peroxidation in Ubiquinol-10-free Human Low Density Lipoprotein

213

Citations

53

References

1995

Year

Abstract

Oxidation of low density lipoprotein (LDL) may be involved in the development of atherosclerosis. It has recently been shown that alpha-tocopherol (alpha-TOH) can act either as an antioxidant or prooxidant for isolated low density lipoprotein (LDL). In the absence of an effective co-antioxidant, alpha-TOH is a prooxidant and this activity is evidently due to reaction of the alpha-tocopheroxyl radical (alpha-TO.) with the LDL's polyunsaturated lipids (Bowry, V. B., and Stocker, R. (1993) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 115, 6029-6045). Herein we examined the effectiveness of selected natural and synthetic radical scavengers as co-antioxidants for inhibiting peroxyl radical-induced peroxidation in LDL that is devoid of ubiquinol-10 (an effective endogenous co-antioxidant) but still contains most of its natural complement of alpha-TOH. Various quinols, catechols, and aminophenols, as well as ascorbate, 6-palmityl ascorbate, and bilirubin, were very effective co-antioxidants under our test conditions, whereas ordinary phenolic antioxidants, including short-tailed alpha-TOH homologues, were less effective. Reduced glutathione, urate, and Probucol were ineffective. These findings confirm that the prooxidant activity of alpha-TOH in LDL relies heavily on the segregation of water-insoluble radicals (particularly alpha-TO.) into individual LDL particles, since it was those compounds that are expected to either irreversibly reduce alpha-TO. or accelerate the diffusion of radicals between particles which most effectively inhibited the tocopherol-mediated phase of peroxidation. Theoretical and practical implications of these findings are discussed, as is their relevance to the "LDL oxidation" hypothesis of atherogenesis.

References

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