Cycling Forums   View New Forum Topics
Today's Forum Topics

Set as homepage

Go Back   Cycling Forums > Other Stuff > Groups > General health and fitness > Health and nutrition > Food and nutrition > sci.med.nutrition > sci.med.nutrition - archive
User Name
Password
Register FAQ Members List Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read


Welcome to CyclingForums.com

You are currently viewing our website as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions. You will have to register before you can post to this thread.

By joining our free online community you will have access to post new topics, communicate privately with other cyclingforums.com members (PM), respond to polls, upload photos and access other special features like product reviews and classifieds.


antioxidant? / vitamin K

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Old 20-10.-2003, 07:55 AM   #1
Doe
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default antioxidant? / vitamin K

There are supposedly two ways a substance is an antioxidant? One being it quenches free radicals
directly or two .. it directly chelates a metal which is causing oxidation. Which of the two would
vitamin K be doing?

J Neurosci. 2003 Jul 2;23(13):5816-26. Related Articles, Links

Novel role of vitamin k in preventing oxidative injury to developing oligodendrocytes and neurons.

Li J, Lin JC, Wang H, Peterson JW, Furie BC, Furie B, Booth SL, Volpe JJ, Rosenberg PA.

Department of Neurology, Division of Neuroscience, Children's Hospital, Boston, MA 02115, USA.

Oxidative stress is believed to be the cause of cell death in multiple disorders of the brain,
including perinatal hypoxia/ischemia. Glutamate, cystine deprivation, homocysteic acid, and the
glutathione synthesis inhibitor buthionine sulfoximine all cause oxidative injury to immature
neurons and oligodendrocytes by depleting intracellular glutathione. Although vitamin K is not a
classical antioxidant, we report here the novel finding that vitamin K1 and K2 (menaquinone-4)
potently inhibit glutathione depletion-mediated oxidative cell death in primary cultures of
oligodendrocyte precursors and immature fetal cortical neurons with EC50 values of 30 nm and 2 nm,
respectively. The mechanism by which vitamin K blocks oxidative injury is independent of its only
known biological function as a cofactor for gamma-glutamylcarboxylase, an enzyme responsible for
posttranslational modification of specific proteins. Neither oligodendrocytes nor neurons possess
significant vitamin K-dependent carboxylase or epoxidase activity. Furthermore, the vitamin K
antagonists warfarin and dicoumarol and the direct carboxylase inhibitor 2-chloro-vitamin K1 have
no effect on the protective function of vitamin K against oxidative injury. Vitamin K does not
prevent the depletion of intracellular glutathione caused by cystine deprivation but completely
blocks free radical accumulation and cell death. The protective and potent efficacy of this
naturally occurring vitamin, with no established clinical side effects, suggests a potential
therapeutic application in preventing oxidative damage to undifferentiated oligodendrocytes in
perinatal hypoxic/ischemic brain injury.

PMID: 12843286 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

--------------------------------------------------------------------------
------

Who loves ya. Tom Jesus Was A Vegetarian! http://jesuswasavegetarian.7h.com Man Is A Herbivore!
http://pages.ivillage.com/ironjustice/manisaherbivore DEAD PEOPLE WALKING
http://pages.ivillage.com/ironjustice/deadpeoplewalking
 
 


Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump



All times are GMT +10. The time now is 01:29 PM.


Powered by: vBulletin Copyright © 2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 2001 - 2006 cyclingforums.com