Literature DB >> 9288403

Lipoic acid increases de novo synthesis of cellular glutathione by improving cystine utilization.

D Han1, G Handelman, L Marcocci, C K Sen, S Roy, H Kobuchi, H J Tritschler, L Flohé, L Packer.   

Abstract

Lipoic acid (thiotic acid) is being used as a dietary supplement, and as a therapeutic agent, and is reported to have beneficial effects in disorders associated with oxidative stress, but its mechanism of action remains unclear. We present evidence that lipoic acid induces a substantial increase in cellular reduced glutathione in cultured human Jurkat T cells human erythrocytes, C6 glial cells, NB41A3 neuroblastoma cells, and peripheral blood lymphocytes. The effect depends on metabolic reduction of lipoic acid to dihydrolipoic acid. Dihydrolipoic acid is released into the culture medium where it reduces cystine. Cysteine thus formed is readily taken up by the neutral amino acid transport system and utilized for glutathione synthesis. By this mechanism lipoic acid enables cystine to bypass the xc- transport system, which is weakly expressed in lymphocytes and inhibited by glutamate. Thereby lipoic acid enables the key enzyme of glutathione synthesis, gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase, which is regulated by uptake-limited cysteine supply, to work at optimum conditions. Flow cytometric analysis of freshly prepared human peripheral blood lymphocytes, using monobromobimane labeling of cellular thiols, reveals that lipoic acid acts mainly to normalize a subpopulation of cells severely compromised in thiol status rather than to increase thiol content beyond physiological levels. Hence lipoic acid may have clinical relevance in restoration of severely glutathione deficient cells.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9288403     DOI: 10.1002/biof.5520060303

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biofactors        ISSN: 0951-6433            Impact factor:   6.113


  60 in total

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9.  Adverse cardiac responses to alpha-lipoic acid in a rat-diabetic model: possible mechanisms?

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