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Threonic acid is a sugar acid derived from threose. The l-isomer is a metabolite of ascorbic acid (vitamin C).[1] One study suggested that because l-threonate inhibits DKK1 expression in vitro, it may have potential in treatment of androgenic alopecia.[2]

References

  1. ^ S Englard and S Seifter (1986). "The Biochemical Functions of Ascorbic Acid". Annual Review of Nutrition. 6: 365–406. doi:10.1146/annurev.nu.06.070186.002053. PMID 3015170.
  2. ^ Kwack, M. H.; Ahn, J. S.; Kim, M. K.; Kim, J. C.; Sun, Y. K. (2010). "Preventable effect of L-threonate, an ascorbate metabolite, on androgen-driven balding via repression of dihydrotestosteroneinduced dickkopf-1 expression in human hair dermal papilla cells". BMB Reports. 43 (10): 688–692. doi:10.5483/BMBRep.2010.43.10.688. PMID 21034532.
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