Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10550143 | Journal of Chromatography B | 2005 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Thiol-dependent peroxidases catalyzing the reductive detoxification of lipid hydroperoxides (LOOHs) are crucial antioxidant components of mammalian cells. There is a growing interest in manipulating expression of such enzymes to better understand their biological roles. A new approach for determining their cellular activity is described, whereby LOOH reduction kinetics are tracked by high performance thin layer chromatography with peroxide-sensitive tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine detection (HPTLC-TPD). The approach was tested on a tumor cell transfectant clone (7G4) over-expressing selenoperoxidase GPx4. Timed incubation of Triton-solubilized 7G4 cells with GSH and peroxidized phosphatidylcholine (PCOOH), followed by lipid extraction, HPTLC-TPD and densitometry revealed an exponential decay of PCOOH at a rate â¼80-times greater than that for GPx4-deficient controls (VC). A TPD-detectable cholesterol hydroperoxide (7α-OOH) was also reduced much faster by 7G4 than VC extracts. Spraying with H2SO4 after TPD revealed both 7α-OOH loss and resolved diol product (7α-OH) accumulation, the kinetics of which were identical. The approach described is relatively convenient, highly specific, and much more sensitive than conventional assays for cellular LOOH reducing enzymes.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
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Authors
Tamas Kriska, Albert W. Girotti,