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10.1152/ajpcell.1994.267.5.C1366

http://scihub22266oqcxt.onion/10.1152/ajpcell.1994.267.5.C1366
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7977698!?!7977698

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suck abstract from ncbi

pmid7977698      Am+J+Physiol 1994 ; 267 (5 Pt 1): C1366-70
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  • Loss of red blood cell glutathione during Mg deficiency: prevention by vitamin E, D-propranolol, and chloroquine #MMPMID7977698
  • Mak IT; Stafford R; Weglicki WB
  • Am J Physiol 1994[Nov]; 267 (5 Pt 1): C1366-70 PMID7977698show ga
  • Mg deficiency results in loss of red blood cell glutathione and was thought to be due to decreased Mg-dependent synthesis. The effects of vitamin E, D-propranolol, and chloroquine on red blood cell glutathione levels in Mg-deficient rats were examined. Feeding the rats a Mg-deficient diet for 3 wk resulted in an approximately 80% decrease in serum Mg and a 55% loss of red blood cell glutathione; concomitantly, plasma thiobarbituric acid reactive (TBAR) materials rose 240%. All three drug treatments had no effect on the plasma Mg levels but significantly inhibited the rise in TBAR content and attenuated (60-80% effective) the loss of glutathione. Red blood cell ghost membranes from the Mg-deficient rats also exhibited 2.3-fold higher TBAR content, which was attenuated by vitamin E treatment. With isolated red blood cells from Mg-sufficient rats, loss of glutathione could be induced by a chemical oxyradical system. Direct protective effects were afforded by alpha-tocopherol and D-propranolol but not by chloroquine. The data suggest that 1) the loss of glutathione during Mg deficiency was due to increased oxidative degradation, 2) both vitamin E and D-propranolol protected by a membrane antiperoxidative action, and 3) chloroquine probably protected by diminishing prooxidant activity secondary to its inhibition of cytokine induction during Mg deficiency.
  • |Animals[MESH]
  • |Chloroquine/pharmacology[MESH]
  • |Erythrocytes/*metabolism[MESH]
  • |Glutathione/*blood[MESH]
  • |Magnesium Deficiency/*blood[MESH]
  • |Male[MESH]
  • |Propranolol/pharmacology[MESH]
  • |Rats[MESH]
  • |Rats, Sprague-Dawley[MESH]
  • |Reactive Oxygen Species/pharmacology[MESH]
  • |Thiobarbituric Acid Reactive Substances/metabolism[MESH]
  • |Time Factors[MESH]


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