Regeneration of Ascorbic Acid by Rat Colon
- 1 April 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Frontiers Media SA in Experimental Biology and Medicine
- Vol. 190 (4) , 369-374
- https://doi.org/10.3181/00379727-190-42874
Abstract
Plants and animals alike use ascorbic acid in a variety of reactions that result in net generation of dehydro-L-ascorbic acid. The ability to reduce dehydro-L-ascorbic acid back to ascorbic acid would conserve "total ascorbate" and would help to maintain the toxic oxidized form of the molecule at a low level. This study evaluated the rate of dehydro-L-ascorbic acid reduction either by following the rate of NADPH consumption or by analysis of the amount of 14C-labeled dehydro-L-ascorbic acid converted to ascorbic acid. A large percentage of the NADPH consumed by a semipurified preparation of rat colonic mucosa in vitro was dependent on the presence of dehydro-L-ascorbic acid. The tissue factor active in regenerating ascorbic acid is intermediate in size between cytochrome c and blue dextran. The present results indicate that the mucosa reduced dehydro-L-ascorbic acid by a cytosolic enzyme that uses NADPH as a hydrogen donor. Subsequent to precipitation by ammonium sulfate, the 55-70% fraction contains most of the reductase activity while consisting of only 17% of the cellular soluble protein.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: