Abstract

Copper-induced plasma lipoprotein oxidation resistance has usually been determined in separated low density lipoprotein (LDL) fractions, that do not contain water-soluble antioxidants present in blood plasma. The aim of this study was to find the main determinants of the measurements of copper-induced lipid oxidation resistance (lag time) in whole serum and plasma total peroxyl radical trapping capacity (TRAP) in a population sample of smoking ( n=25) or non-smoking ( n=26) middle aged men at high risk of cardiovascular diseases. Smokers had significantly lower plasma ascorbic acid values, but only slightly lower α-tocopherol, β-carotene and serum urate values than non-smokers. Plasma ascorbic acid concentration explained 23.5% of the lag time variation (standardized regression coefficient β=0.48; P=0.004) in smokers and 5.6% in non-smokers. Serum urate concentration was the strongest determinant of lag time in non-smokers ( β=0.64, P<0.001). In addition, serum albumin, lipid standardized α-tocopherol and serum high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol entered the multivariate regression model for lag time. For plasma TRAP, only urate and ascorbic acid entered the multivariate regression model. Lag times in serum and in isolated very low density lipoprotein (VLDL) and LDL fraction did not correlate, but the maximal rate of these reactions correlated significantly. These results confirm that lipid peroxidation resistance in serum or plasma are associated with ascorbic acid, urate, α-tocopherol, albumin and HDL concentrations. The measurement of lipid oxidation resistance in whole serum might be more physiological than in isolated lipoprotein fraction, as the effects of water-soluble antioxidants are not artificially removed.

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