Artigo
Metilglioxal: uma toxina endógena?
Fecha
2010-01-01Registro en:
Química Nova. Sociedade Brasileira de Química, v. 33, n. 10, p. 2193-2201, 2010.
0100-4042
S0100-40422010001000032.pdf
S0100-40422010001000032
10.1590/S0100-40422010001000032
WOS:000286298500032
Autor
Sartori, Adriano
Bechara, Etelvino José Henriques [UNIFESP]
Institución
Resumen
Methylglyoxal is a very reactive α-oxoaldehyde putatively produced by glycolysis, cytochrome P450-catalyzed acetone oxidation and aminoacetone oxidation. Methylglyoxal has been pointed as a substrate for the glyoxalase system ultimately energy-yielding pyruvate, but methylglyoxal is also a toxicant involved in protein aggregation and DNA modification. Controversial hypothesis on methylglyoxal as an anticancer agent, an energy-yielding glycolysis intermediates, and as a regulator of cell division have also been proposed. Methylglyoxal research focuses now on unveiling its biological properties and on the discovery of drugs capable to inhibit its toxic effects, principally in diabetes.