Proline Reduces Brain Cytochrome C Oxidase: Prevention By Antioxidants

High_Prob

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Proline reduces brain cytochrome c oxidase: prevention by antioxidants. - PubMed - NCBI

Proline reduces brain cytochrome c oxidase: prevention by antioxidants.
Delwing D1, Delwing D, Chiarani F, Kurek AG, Wyse AT.
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Abstract
In the present study, we initially investigated the in vivo (acute and chronic) and in vitro effects of proline on cytochrome c oxidase (complex IV) activity in rat cerebral cortex to test the hypothesis that proline might alter energy metabolism and that this alteration could be provoked by oxidative stress. The action of alpha-tocopherol and ascorbic acid on the effects produced by proline was also evaluated. For acute administration, 29- and 60-day-old rats received one subcutaneous injection of proline (18.2 micromol/g body weight) or an equivalent volume of 0.9% saline solution (control) and were sacrificed 1h later. For chronic treatment, proline was injected subcutaneously twice a day at 10h intervals from the 6(th) to the 28(th) day of age. Rats were sacrificed 12h (29(th)) or 31 days (60(th)) after the last injection. Results showed that acute administration of proline significantly diminished the activity of cytochrome c oxidase in the cerebral cortex of 29- and 60-day-old rats. On the other hand, chronic hyperprolinemia reduced this complex activity only on day 29, but not on the 60(th) day of life. In another set of experiments, 22-day-old rats or 53-day-old rats were pretreated for 1 week with daily intraperitoneal administration of alpha-tocopherol (40 mg/kg) and ascorbic acid (100mg/kg) or saline. Twelve hours after the last antioxidant injection, rats received a single injection of proline or saline and were killed 1h later. In parallel to chronic treatment, rats received a daily intraperitoneal injection of alpha-tocopherol and ascorbic acid from the 6(th) to the 28(th) day of life and were killed 12h after the last injection. Results showed that the pretreatment with alpha-tocopherol and ascorbic acid before acute proline administration or concomitant to chronic proline administration significantly prevented these effects. We also observed that proline (3.0 microM-1.0 mM) when added to the incubation medium (in vitro studies) did not alter cytochrome c oxidase activity. Data suggest that the inhibitory effect of proline on cytochrome c oxidase activity is possibly associated with oxidative stress and that this parameter may be involved in the brain dysfunction observed in hyperprolinemia.
 

magnesiumania

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This is why you take proline in conjuction with red light therapy. Yeeet another study dobe under fake light. Its so prevalent.
 

SOMO

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Gelatin is high in Proline, so this is concerning.

So is Gluten/Wheat, and supposedly this is why Gluten is hard to digest (even for non-celiacs) because many of the Proteases/Digestive Enzymes do not cleave or denature Proline.


This is why you take proline in conjuction with red light therapy. Yeeet another study dobe under fake light. Its so prevalent.

If an Amino Acid requires a special lamp that you can only order online for it to be beneficial...maybe that amino acid is not beneficial.
 

magnesiumania

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Jul 17, 2018
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607
Gelatin is high in Proline, so this is concerning.

So is Gluten/Wheat, and supposedly this is why Gluten is hard to digest (even for non-celiacs) because many of the Proteases/Digestive Enzymes do not cleave or denature Proline.




If an Amino Acid requires a special lamp that you can only order online for it to be beneficial...maybe that amino acid is not beneficial.
It only require a lamp if you live under artificial light most of the time. If your outside and aligned with the natural spectrum, proline works the way its supposed to.
 
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