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Frll to Super Cell - with
Glutathione
by: Priya Shah
Imagine you're a
cell.
Inside your body
runs the machinery that creates life itself. But as that machinery
keeps running, day after day, you begin to get worn out - the
friction and the processes that cause damage (here the
"free-radicals" - highly destructive little entities generated by
biochemical processes, as well as pollutants, UV radiation and other
sources) start to create havoc and you begin to lose the battle to
disease, old age and ultimately death.
In fact your battle
would be over much sooner were it not for the numerous mechanisms
that you and other mammalian cells evolved over millions of years,
as protection from the injury that can result from your normal
functional processes. The foremost among these internal protective
systems is the "Glutathione antioxidant system."
Glutathione, a
small molecule composed of three amino acids - glycine, glutamate
and cysteine - acts as your cellular Super-Mop, soaking up
"free-radicals" (with the help of the sulfur-containing portion of
the cysteine molecule), protecting your cellular membranes and
internal organs from the cascading destruction they can cause.
Besides being the
major antioxidant that you produce as protection from
"free-radicals," glutathione is also a very important detoxifying
agent, enabling you to get rid of undesirable toxins and pollutants.
If you were a liver, kidney or lung cell, you would contain high
levels of glutathione, as you'd be exposed to the greatest levels of
toxins.
Glutathione also
helps you dispose of many cancer- producing chemicals, heavy metals,
drug metabolites etc. that invade the pristine recesses of your
cellular world. And Mother Nature (the first recycler) also designed
you to use glutathione to recycle other well-known antioxidants such
as vitamin C and vitamin E, keeping them in their active state.
If you were a cell
delegated to the immune system department, you would require
glutathione for many of the intricate steps needed to carry out your
essential immune response functions - such as multiplying to make
many clones of yourself, to mount a full-bodied immune response, or
"neutralizing" undesirable elements of the cellular community, like
cancerous or virally infected cells.
But your finicky
cell membrane does not allow whole glutathione molecules to cross
over directly into your cellular spaces. And every time a molecule
of glutathione neutralizes a destructive free-radical or toxin, it
fatally binds with the undesirable element and is washed out with
them in the bile or the urine.
So how do you
replenish your stores and get your daily fix of glutathione? Simple.
You manufacture it in your cellular factory, from its raw materials
- glycine, glutamate and cysteine.
If your human eats
a diet high in fresh fruits and vegetables and freshly prepared
meats, you should get be getting enough glutamate and glycine. But
cystine comes mostly from eggs, milk and cheese. And when eggs, milk
and cheese are cooked or processed, the composition of Cystine is
changed to Cysteine (small difference in spelling, but BIG
difference in action). While still a valuable protein, it can no
longer feed your glutathione levels.
If you can get a
sufficient supply of cysteine (which determines the rate at which
you can make glutathione), your arsenal is well- stocked. If not,
you and your human are at a strategic disadvantage in the battle of
"Cell v/s Free-radical Destroyers."
As a normal,
healthy cell, increasing your glutathione levels could help you and
your human maintain that strategic advantage in the battle against
free-radicals. If you're not really in your prime, boosting your
levels could tip the scales in your favor, and help you fight the
cellular damage that causes disease and aging.
Copyright 2002
Priya Shah
About The Author
Priya Shah is the Editor of
"The Glutathione Report," newsletter featuring regular updates
on the health benefits of Glutathione. Get a free report on
Glutathione in Health and Disease when you subscribe
http://www.glutathione-report.com |
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