Abstract
We examined the possibility that bilirubin oxidation is provoked in vivo by using scurvy-prone ODS-od/od rats treated with endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide). Recently, bilirubin oxidative metabolites were isolated from human urine and named biotripyrrin-a and biotripyrrin-b. In ODS-od/od rats fed an ascorbic-acid-free diet, the concentration of bilirubin metabolites in urine was increased 7.0-fold at 3 h after injection of lipopolysaccharide and 4.4-fold at 10 h compared to the control rats injected with saline. The dietary supplement of ascorbic acid, the physiological antioxidant, suppressed the increase in bilirubin metabolites in urine after lipopolysaccharide injection: concentrations of biotripyrrin-a and biotripyrrin-b in urine collected 6.5-10 h after the injection were lower in rats fed an ascorbic-acid-supplemented diet than in rats fed an ascorbic-acid-free diet. Moreover, feeding of ascorbic acid suppressed the hepatic mRNA level of heme oxygenase-l, the rate-limiting enzyme of bilirubin biosynthesis, in rats injected with lipopolysaccharide. These findings indicate that bilirubin oxidation is markedly stimulated in lipopolysaccharide-treated rats and suggest that bilirubin and ascorbic acid have physiologically protective effects; against oxidative stress.
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Yamaguchi, T., Hashizume, T., Tanaka, M., Nakayama, M., Sugimoto, A., Ikeda, S., … Horio, F. (1997). Bilirubin oxidation provoked by endotoxin treatment is suppressed by feeding ascorbic acid in a rat mutant unable to synthesize ascorbic acid. European Journal of Biochemistry, 245(2), 233–240. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1432-1033.1997.00233.x
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