1. Academic Validation
  2. The relationship between the physicochemical properties and the biological effects of alloxan and several N-alkyl substituted alloxan derivatives

The relationship between the physicochemical properties and the biological effects of alloxan and several N-alkyl substituted alloxan derivatives

  • J Endocrinol. 1993 Oct;139(1):153-63. doi: 10.1677/joe.0.1390153.
R Munday 1 K Ludwig S Lenzen
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Ruakura Agricultural Research Centre, Hamilton, New Zealand.
Abstract

Alloxan causes diabetes in experimental Animals through its ability to destroy the insulin-secreting B-cells of the pancreas. Alloxan is hydrophilic and chemically unstable; it is reactive toward thiols, undergoing redox cycling in the presence of glutathione and oxidizing protein-bound thiol groups, as reflected by inhibition of the thiol enzymes, Hexokinase and Glucokinase. It is apparently also selectively taken up by the GLUT-2 glucose transporter in the pancreatic B-cell membrane. In order to investigate which, if any, of these physicochemical properties are important in the toxic action of alloxan, we have examined seven N-alkyl substituted alloxan derivatives of various diabetogenic activity. Hydrophilicity was identified as a factor essential for diabetogenicity. Stability, rate of redox cycling and reactivity toward thiol groups were not correlated with diabetogenicity. Selective uptake by the GLUT-2 glucose transporter is not a prerequisite for the diabetogenicity of alloxan derivatives.

Figures
Products