Evidently xanthine oxidase is one of the major producers of superoxide anions: http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/436774 Yet it is also the route by which uric acid, one of the major anti-oxidants gets produced. Is there a net benefit to uric acid or not? Does it always cost a superoxide anion to produce, or does uric acid get recycled somehow so it provides benefit over and over once it has been produced? If not how can uric acid be a plausible theory for human longevity replacing the role of acorbic acid? Data first, explanation later! One difference may be that uric acid is a scavenger of some pretty powerful oxidizers such as peroxinitrite, hydroxyl radical, etc., while superoxide per se is not very reactive and must be converted to (e.g.) one of the above before it becomes destructive. This requires the presence of something else, such as nitric oxide produced by (say) iNOS. All of which provides plenty of opportunity for getting rid of the superoxide before it does something bad. BTW, ( he says modestly ) I first proposed that Uric acid substitutes for ascorbate in primates over 30 years ago in the journal Nature. See
www.drproctor.com/rev/ascorbicuric.htm . In a classic example of Dulbecco's law ( the most famous discoverer generally gets the credit, not the first ), Bruce Ame's et al's rediscovery a decade later is generally cited <G... Dr P