Hydrogen Sulfide as a Protector of Blood Vessels?
Hydrogen sulfide, H2S, a smelly gas known for example from rotten eggs, appears to be a very important regulatory product in the body. If you read this blog regularly, this will not be any surprise to you. It has been quite a while since, while searching for the mechanism of action of sulfur amino acid restriction, I found studies that surprisingly link the restriction of these amino acids with increased production of H2S as a product of the activity of the enzyme cystathionine-γ-lyase (CSE/CTH). The main mechanism of hydrogen sulfide is S-sulfhydration of enzymes, that is, a certain change in the “decoration” of these nano-machines, which either further activates or deactivates their function. Today we will look at the effect of hydrogen sulfide on vascular endothelial cells, that is, those that influence cardiovascular diseases generally associated with LDL-C levels, that is, cholesterol. I will not repeat here that cholesterol is a very poor marker of risk for these diseases. Take a...