Abstract

The gastrointestinal glutathione peroxidase (GI-GPx) is the fourth member of the GPx family. In rodents, it is exclusively expressed in the gastrointestinal tract, in humans also in liver. It has, therefore, been discussed to function as a primary barrier against the absorption of ingested hydroperoxides. A vital function of GI-GPx can be deduced from the unusual stability of its mRNA under selenium-limiting conditions, the presence of low amounts of GI-GPx protein in selenium deficiency where cGPx is absent, and the fast reappearance of the GI-GPx protein upon refeeding of cultured cells with selenium compared to the slower reappearance of cGPx protein. Furthermore, the Secis efficiency of GI-GPx is low when compared to cGPx and PHGPx. It is, however, almost independent of the selenium status of the cells tested. All these characteristics rank GI-GPx high in the hierarchy of selenoproteins and point to a role of GI-GPx which might be more crucial than that of cGPx, at least in the gastrointestinal system.

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