Hans J. Tritschler
University of California, Berkeley
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Featured researches published by Hans J. Tritschler.
Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 1995
Lester Packer; Eric Witt; Hans J. Tritschler
alpha-Lipoic acid, which plays an essential role in mitochondrial dehydrogenase reactions, has recently gained considerable attention as an antioxidant. Lipoate, or its reduced form, dihydrolipoate, reacts with reactive oxygen species such as superoxide radicals, hydroxyl radicals, hypochlorous acid, peroxyl radicals, and singlet oxygen. It also protects membranes by interacting with vitamin C and glutathione, which may in turn recycle vitamin E. In addition to its antioxidant activities, dihydrolipoate may exert prooxidant actions through reduction of iron. alpha-Lipoic acid administration has been shown to be beneficial in a number of oxidative stress models such as ischemia-reperfusion injury, diabetes (both alpha-lipoic acid and dihydrolipoic acid exhibit hydrophobic binding to proteins such as albumin, which can prevent glycation reactions), cataract formation, HIV activation, neurodegeneration, and radiation injury. Furthermore, lipoate can function as a redox regulator of proteins such as myoglobin, prolactin, thioredoxin and NF-kappa B transcription factor. We review the properties of lipoate in terms of (1) reactions with reactive oxygen species; (2) interactions with other antioxidants; (3) beneficial effects in oxidative stress models or clinical conditions.
Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 1998
Juanita Bustamante; John K. Lodge; Lucia Marcocci; Hans J. Tritschler; Lester Packer; Bertrand Rihn
R-alpha-Lipoic acid is found naturally occurring as a prosthetic group in alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase complexes of the mitochondria, and as such plays a fundamental role in metabolism. Although this has been known for decades, only recently has free supplemented alpha-lipoic acid been found to affect cellular metabolic processes in vitro, as it has the ability to alter the redox status of cells and interact with thiols and other antioxidants. Therefore, it appears that this compound has important therapeutic potential in conditions where oxidative stress is involved. Early case studies with alpha-lipoic acid were performed with little knowledge of the action of alpha-lipoic acid at a cellular level, but with the rationale that because the naturally occurring protein bound form of alpha-lipoic acid has a pivotal role in metabolism, that supplementation may have some beneficial effect. Such studies sought to evaluate the effect of supplemented alpha-lipoic acid, using low doses, on lipid or carbohydrate metabolism, but little or no effect was observed. A common response in these trials was an increase in glucose uptake, but increased plasma levels of pyruvate and lactate were also observed, suggesting that an inhibitory effect on the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex was occurring. During the same period, alpha-lipoic acid was also used as a therapeutic agent in a number of conditions relating to liver disease, including alcohol-induced damage, mushroom poisoning, metal intoxification, and CCl4 poisoning. Alpha-Lipoic acid supplementation was successful in the treatment for these conditions in many cases. Experimental studies and clinical trials in the last 5 years using high doses of alpha-lipoic acid (600 mg in humans) have provided new and consistent evidence for the therapeutic role of antioxidant alpha-lipoic acid in the treatment of insulin resistance and diabetic polyneuropathy. This new insight should encourage clinicians to use alpha-lipoic acid in diseases affecting liver in which oxidative stress is involved.
Free Radical Research | 1994
Brigitte C. Scott; Okezie I. Aruoma; Patricia J. Evans; Charles A. O'Neill; Albert van der Vliet; Carroll E. Cross; Hans J. Tritschler; Barry Halliwell
A detailed evaluation of the antioxidant and pro-oxidant properties of lipoic acid (LA) and dihydrolipoic acid (DHLA) was performed. Both compounds are powerful scavengers of hypochlorous acid, able to protect alpha 1-antiproteinase against inactivation by HOCl. LA was a powerful scavenger of hydroxyl radicals (OH.) and could inhibit both iron-dependent OH. generation and peroxidation of ox-brain phospholipid liposomes in the presence of FeCl3-ascorbate, presumably by binding iron ions and rendering them redox-inactive. By contrast, DHLA accelerated iron-dependent OH. generation and lipid peroxidation, probably by reducing Fe3+ to Fe2+. LA inhibited this pro-oxidant action of DHLA. However, DHLA did not accelerate DNA degradation by a ferric bleomycin complex and slightly inhibited peroxidation of arachidonic acid by the myoglobin-H2O2 system. Under certain circumstances, DHLA accelerated the loss of activity of alpha-antiproteinase exposed to ionizing radiation under a N2O/O2 atmosphere and also the loss of creatine kinase activity in human plasma exposed to gas-phase cigarette smoke. Neither LA nor DHLA reacted with superoxide radical (O.2-) or H2O2 at significant rates, but both were good scavengers of trichloromethylperoxyl radical (CCl3O2.). We conclude that LA and DHLA have powerful antioxidant properties. However, DHLA can also exert pro-oxidant properties, both by its iron ion-reducing ability and probably by its ability to generate reactive sulphur-containing radicals that can damage certain proteins, such as alpha 1-antiproteinase and creatine kinase.
Biochemical Pharmacology | 1994
Garry J. Handelman; Derick Han; Hans J. Tritschler; Lester Packer
Lipoic acid has been reported recently to be an effective antioxidant in biological systems. It may act in vivo through reduction to its dithiol form, dihydrolipoic acid. Using a dual Hg/Au electrode, and HPLC with electrochemical detection, a method was developed which allowed simultaneous measurement of lipoic acid and dihydrolipoic acid, at nanomolar levels. (RS)-alpha-Lipoic acid was added to human cells in tissue culture (Jurkat T-lymphocytes and primary neonatal diploid fibroblasts). Lipoic acid was converted rapidly by the cells to dihydrolipoic acid, which accumulated in the cell pellet. Monitored over a 2-hr interval, dihydrolipoic acid was released, and several-fold more dihydrolipoic acid could be found in the medium than in the pellet.
FEBS Letters | 1996
Matthew Whiteman; Hans J. Tritschler; Barry Halliwell
Peroxynitrite, formed by combination of superoxide radical with nitric oxide, is a reactive tissue‐damaging species apparently involved in the pathology of several human diseases. Peroxynitrite nitrates tyrosine residues and inactivates α 1‐antiprotinase. We show that both lipoic acid and dihydrolipoic acid efficiently protect against damage by peroxynitrite. By contrast, other disulphides tested did not. The biological antioxidant effects of lipoate/dihydrolipoate may involve scavenging of reactive nitrogen species as well as reactive oxygen species.
Biochemical Pharmacology | 1995
Anastasia Constantinescu; Uri Pick; Garry J. Handelman; Nobuya Haramaki; Derick Han; Maurizio Podda; Hans J. Tritschler; Lester Packer
Reduction of exogenous lipoic acid to dihydrolipoate is known to occur in several mammalian cells and tissues. Dihydrolipoate is a potent radical scavenger, and may provide significant antioxidant protection. Because lipoic acid appears in the bloodstream after oral administration, we have examined the reduction of exogenous lipoate by human erythrocytes. Normal human erythrocytes reduced lipoate to dihydrolipoate only in the presence of glucose; deoxyglucose did not substitute for glucose, indicating that the reduction of lipoate requires glucose metabolism. Furthermore, the reduction was shown to be NADPH dependent. Erythrocytes isolated from a human subject with a genetic deficiency of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (and, therefore, deficient in the formation of NADPH) did not reduce lipoate. Dehydroepiandrosterone, a specific inhibitor of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, inhibited lipoate reduction. Our findings imply that some of the reduction of exogenous lipoic acid is catalysed by glutathione reductase, a flavoprotein dehydrogenase; mitomycin C, an inhibitor of FAD-dependent reductases, inhibited lipoate reduction by erythrocytes, and glutathione reductase purified from human erythrocytes was observed to reduce lipoic acid in a cell-free system. We further explored these findings with erythrocyte ghosts and liposomes. Our results indicate that a transport system exists for alpha-lipoic acid and dihydrolipoate; resealed erythrocyte ghosts, containing trapped lipoamide dehydrogenase and pyridine nucleotides, reduced externally added lipoate. By contrast, liposomes prepared with enzyme and pyridine nucleotides did not catalyze reduction of lipoate. This work indicates that uptake of exogenous lipoate and reduction to dihydrolipoate by normal human erythrocytes may contribute to oxidant protection in the human bloodstream.
Free Radical Research | 1996
Victor Schepkin; Teruyuki Kawabata; Hans J. Tritschler; Lester Packer
Dihydroplipoate and lipoate are physiological thiols which in addition to their coenzyme functions exhibit antioxidant activity. For NMR investigations of their protective mechanism in biological and model systems it is very important to know the full assignment of proton and carbon spectra of these molecules in water (D2O). An unambiguous assignment of proton and carbon NMR spectra has been made for dihydrolipoate and its short chain derivatives bisnor- and tetranor-lipoic acid in D2O and CDCl3 solutions using 2D NMR methods. Oxidation of dihydrolipoic acid produces substantial electron density deshielding of the carbons nearest to the SH groups with the largest shift found at the inner SH group (17.79 ppm in D2O, 16.93 in CDCl3) and almost no changes in the tail portion of the molecule. However, bisnor-dihydrolipoic acid and especially tetranor-dihydrolipoic acid have more carbon deshielding near the outer SH group of the molecule which correlates with their known diminished ion chelating activity. Moreover, the proton triplet at position 2 of lipoic acid has strong pH dependence (pK = 4.58) due to the close proximity to the carboxylic group and this feature may be used for monitoring pH.
Biofactors | 1997
Derick Han; Garry J. Handelman; Lucia Marcocci; Chandan K. Sen; Sashwati Roy; Hirotsugu Kobuchi; Hans J. Tritschler; Leopold Flohé; Lester Packer
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1994
Maurizio Podda; Hans J. Tritschler; H. Ulrich; Lester Packer
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1995
Derick Han; Hans J. Tritschler; Lester Packer