Accumulation of Vitamin C (Ascorbate) and Its Oxidized Metabolite Dehydroascorbic Acid Occurs by Separate Mechanisms (*)

R. Welch,Yaohui Wang,A. Crossman,J. Park,K. Kirk,M. Levine

Published 1995 in Journal of Biological Chemistry

ABSTRACT

It is unknown whether ascorbate alone (vitamin C), its oxidized metabolite dehydroascorbic acid alone, or both species are transported into human cells. This problem was addressed using specific assays for each compound, freshly synthesized pure dehydroascorbic acid, the specially synthesized analog 6-chloroascorbate, and a new assay for 6-chloroascorbate. Ascorbate and dehydroascorbic acid were transported and accumulated distinctly; neither competed with the other. Ascorbate was accumulated as ascorbate by sodium-dependent carrier-mediated active transport. Dehydroascorbic acid transport and accumulation as ascorbate was at least 10-fold faster than ascorbate transport and was sodium-independent. Once transported, dehydroascorbic acid was immediately reduced intracellularly to ascorbate. The analog 6-chloroascorbate had no effect on dehydroascorbic acid transport but was a competitive inhibitor of ascorbate transport. The K for 6-chloroascorbate (2.9-4.4 μM) was similar to the K for ascorbate transport (9.8-12.6 μM). 6-Chloroascorbate was itself transported and accumulated in fibroblasts by a sodium-dependent transporter. These data provide new information that ascorbate and dehydroascorbic acid are transported into human neutrophils and fibroblasts by two distinct mechanisms and that the compound available for intracellular utilization is ascorbate.

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