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Homocysteine Disulphides and Vascular Disease

The total plasma concentration of homocysteine is a marker of this amino acid's atherogenic potential. However, the homocysteine pool exists almost entirely as oxidized homocysteine equivalents (OHcyE), composed of homocystine and cysteine-homocysteine disulphides (20–30%), and protein-bound di...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Iuliano, Mauro, De Tommaso, Gaetano, Ragone, Raffaele
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: IOS Press 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3834667/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19893200
http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/DMA-2009-0649
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author Iuliano, Mauro
De Tommaso, Gaetano
Ragone, Raffaele
author_facet Iuliano, Mauro
De Tommaso, Gaetano
Ragone, Raffaele
author_sort Iuliano, Mauro
collection PubMed
description The total plasma concentration of homocysteine is a marker of this amino acid's atherogenic potential. However, the homocysteine pool exists almost entirely as oxidized homocysteine equivalents (OHcyE), composed of homocystine and cysteine-homocysteine disulphides (20–30%), and protein-bound disulphide (70–80%). We have noticed that the total concentration of OHcyE in injured coronary artery tissue is higher than the aqueous solubility of homocystine (∼1.4–1.5 × 10(-3) mol kg(-1) versus ∼0.6 mol kg^{-1}). Based on the measurement of the solubility of homocystine in a plasma-mimetic condition (0.17 mol kg^{-1} NaCl at 37°C), we have estimated that OHcyE may really reach their saturation limit in the vascular tissue (0.93–1.02 × 10(-3) mol kg(-1)), above which their deposition as solid phase may occur. This means that significant leakage of intracellular fluid can promote OHcyE crystallization in tissue fluids, which may serve to initiate inflammation. We speculate that deposition of OHcyE crystals could damage blood vessels and act as a primer of homocysteine-triggered inflammation, thus being along the causal pathway that leads to vascular dysfunction.
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spelling pubmed-38346672013-12-02 Homocysteine Disulphides and Vascular Disease Iuliano, Mauro De Tommaso, Gaetano Ragone, Raffaele Dis Markers Other The total plasma concentration of homocysteine is a marker of this amino acid's atherogenic potential. However, the homocysteine pool exists almost entirely as oxidized homocysteine equivalents (OHcyE), composed of homocystine and cysteine-homocysteine disulphides (20–30%), and protein-bound disulphide (70–80%). We have noticed that the total concentration of OHcyE in injured coronary artery tissue is higher than the aqueous solubility of homocystine (∼1.4–1.5 × 10(-3) mol kg(-1) versus ∼0.6 mol kg^{-1}). Based on the measurement of the solubility of homocystine in a plasma-mimetic condition (0.17 mol kg^{-1} NaCl at 37°C), we have estimated that OHcyE may really reach their saturation limit in the vascular tissue (0.93–1.02 × 10(-3) mol kg(-1)), above which their deposition as solid phase may occur. This means that significant leakage of intracellular fluid can promote OHcyE crystallization in tissue fluids, which may serve to initiate inflammation. We speculate that deposition of OHcyE crystals could damage blood vessels and act as a primer of homocysteine-triggered inflammation, thus being along the causal pathway that leads to vascular dysfunction. IOS Press 2009 2009-11-05 /pmc/articles/PMC3834667/ /pubmed/19893200 http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/DMA-2009-0649 Text en Copyright © 2009 Hindawi Publishing Corporation.
spellingShingle Other
Iuliano, Mauro
De Tommaso, Gaetano
Ragone, Raffaele
Homocysteine Disulphides and Vascular Disease
title Homocysteine Disulphides and Vascular Disease
title_full Homocysteine Disulphides and Vascular Disease
title_fullStr Homocysteine Disulphides and Vascular Disease
title_full_unstemmed Homocysteine Disulphides and Vascular Disease
title_short Homocysteine Disulphides and Vascular Disease
title_sort homocysteine disulphides and vascular disease
topic Other
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3834667/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19893200
http://dx.doi.org/10.3233/DMA-2009-0649
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