3,451 research outputs found

    Inhibition of adriamycin-promoted microsomal lipid peroxidation by β-carotene, α-tocopherol and retinol at high and low oxygen partial pressures

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    AbstractIron-dependent peroxidation of rat liver microsomes, enhanced by adriamycin, was measured in the presence of increasing concentrations of α-tocopherol, β-carotene and retinol at low and high pO2. β-Carotene and α-tocopherol inhibited lipid peroxidation by more than 60% when present at concentrations greater than 50 nmol/mg microsomal protein at both high and low pO2. Retinol inhibited peroxidation by 39% at concentrations greater than 100 nmol/mg microsomal protein. This maximal level of inhibition by retinol was unaltered by pO2. However, β-carotene was more effective than α-tocopherol or retinol at a pO2 of 4 mmHg, whereas α-tocopherol was more effective under aerobic conditions. Since adriamycin-dependent lipid peroxidation is maximal at low pO2, β-carotene may play a role in protecting against this process

    Response of the benthic fauna of an urban stream during six years of restoration

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    Okeover Stream flows through the University of Canterbury campus and has been subject to restoration since 1998. While initially spring-fed, its main source of flow is now aquifer water, which has been used for cooling university buildings. Water quality is generally good, but the low-gradient streambed includes substantial amounts of fine inorganic sediment and organic matter including deciduous tree leaves. Restoration activities include riparian plantings, channel shaping, substratum manipulations and additions, the construction of sediment traps and macrophyte management. Thirty aquatic invertebrate taxa (13-19 per year) have been recorded in annual surveys since 2000. Paracalliope fluviatilis (Amphipoda), Copepoda and Oligochaeta were most abundant in all years, whereas Mollusca and Trichoptera always made up <4 % and <2 % of individuals, respectively. Furthermore, cased caddisflies were found only in the two (of four) downstream reaches, whereas Copepoda were predominantly in the upper two reaches where flow was generally slower. Low annual MCI (69-84) and SQMCI (3.5-4.8) values indicated the fauna comprised mainly species that are tolerant of poor water quality or degraded habitat conditions. Our data indicate that the invertebrate fauna has yet to respond positively to the changes in physical habitat and riparian conditions made along Okeover Stream. The introduction of pulses of poor quality water during heavy rainfalls, high levels of siltation, heavy metals in bed sediments, large accumulations of slowly decomposing leaves and an inadequate source of potential colonists may all contribute to the weak response of the invertebrate fauna to restoration activities

    Biologically significant scavenging of the myeloperoxidase-derived oxidant hypochlorous acid by ascorbic acid Implications for antioxidant protection in the inflamed rheumatoid joint

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    AbstractAscorbic acid, at physiological concentrations, can scavenge the myeloperoxidase-derived oxidant hypochlorous acid at rates sufficient to protect α1-antiprotease against inactivation by this molecule. The rapid depletion of ascorbic acid at sites of inflammation, as in the inflamed rheumatoid joint, may therefore facilitate proteolytic damage
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