Skip to content
Open access · CC-BY via OpenAlex

Taurine and inflammatory diseases

Janusz Marcinkiewicz, Ewa Kontny

Amino Acids · 2012 · ▲ 526 citations

Abstract

Taurine (2-aminoethanesulfonic acid) is the most abundant free amino acid in humans and plays an important role in several essential biological processes such as bile acid conjugation, maintenance of calcium homeostasis, osmoregulation and membrane stabilization. Moreover, attenuation of apoptosis and its antioxidant activity seem to be crucial for the cytoprotective effects of taurine. Although these properties are not tissue specific, taurine reaches particularly high concentrations in tissues exposed to elevated levels of oxidants (e.g., inflammatory cells). It suggests that taurine may play an important role in inflammation associated with oxidative stress. Indeed, at the site of inflammation, taurine is known to react with and detoxify hypochlorous acid generated by the neutrophil myeloperoxidase (MPO)-halide system. This reaction results in the formation of less toxic taurine chloramine (TauCl). Both haloamines, TauCl and taurine bromamine (TauBr), the product of taurine reaction with hypobromous acid (HOBr), exert antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory properties. In contrast to a well-documented regulatory role of taurine and taurine haloamines (TauCl, TauBr) in acute inflammation, their role in the pathogenesis of inflammatory diseases is not clear. This review summarizes our current knowledge concerning the role of taurine, TauCl and TauBr in the pathogenesis of inflammatory diseases initiated or propagated by MPO-derived oxidants. The aim of this paper is to show links between inflammation, neutrophils, MPO, oxidative stress and taurine. We will discuss the possible contribution of taurine and taurine haloamines to the pathogenesis of inflammatory diseases, especially in the best studied example of rheumatoid arthritis.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.1007/s00726-012-1361-4
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-23 MST

Cite this

APA
Marcinkiewicz, J., &amp; Kontny, E. (2012). Taurine and inflammatory diseases. <em>Amino Acids</em>. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00726-012-1361-4
Vancouver
Marcinkiewicz J, Kontny E. Taurine and inflammatory diseases. Amino Acids. 2012. doi:10.1007/s00726-012-1361-4.
BibTeX
@article{janusz2012Taurin, title = {Taurine and inflammatory diseases}, author = {Janusz Marcinkiewicz and Ewa Kontny}, journal = {Amino Acids}, year = {2012}, doi = {10.1007/s00726-012-1361-4}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings