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1.
Melatonin and steroid hormones are cytochrome P450 (CYP or P450; EC 1.14.14.1) substrates that have antioxidant properties and mitochondrial protective activities. The mitochondrial intermembrane space (IMS) Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase (SOD1) is activated after oxidative modification of its critical thiol moieties by superoxide anion (O2??). This study was aimed at investigating the potential association between the hormonal protective antioxidant actions in mitochondria and the regulation of IMS SOD1 activity. Melatonin, testosterone, dihydrotestosterone, estradiol, and vitamin D induced a sustained activation over time of SOD1 in intact mitochondria, showing a bell-shaped enzyme activation dose response with a threshold at 50 nM and a maximum effect at 1 μM concentration. Enzyme activation was not affected by furafylline, but it was inhibited by omeprazole, ketoconazole, and tiron, thereby supporting the occurrence of a mitochondrial P450 activity and O2?? requirements. Mitochondrial P450-dependent activation of IMS SOD1 prevented O2??-induced loss of aconitase activity in intact mitochondria respiring in State 3. Optimal protection of aconitase activity was observed at 0.1 μM P450 substrate concentration, evidencing a likely oxidative effect on the mitochondrial matrix by higher substrate concentrations. Likewise, enzyme activation mediated by mitochondrial P450 activity delayed CaCl2-induced loss of transmembrane potential and decreased cytochrome c release. Omeprazole and ketoconazole abrogated both protecting mitochondrial functions promoted by melatonin and steroid hormones.  相似文献   

2.
This work demonstrates how increased activity of copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (SOD1) paradoxically boosts production of toxic reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the intermembrane space (IMS) of mitochondria. Even though SOD1 is a cytosolic enzyme, a fraction of it is found in the IMS, where it is thought to provide protection against oxidative damage. We found that SOD1 controls cytochrome c-catalyzed peroxidation in vitro when superoxide is available. The presence of SOD1 significantly increased the rate of ROS production in mitoplasts, which are devoid of outer membrane and IMS. In response to inhibition of respiration with antimycin A, isolated mouse wild-type mitochondria increased ROS production, but the mitochondria from mice lacking SOD1 (SOD1(-/-)) did not. Also, lymphocytes isolated from SOD1(-/-) mice produced significantly less ROS than did wild-type cells and were more resistant to apoptosis induced by inhibition of respiration. Moreover, an increased amount of the toxic mutant G93A SOD1 in the IMS increased ROS production. The mitochondrial dysfunction and cell damage paradoxically induced by SOD1-mediated ROS production may be implicated in chronic degenerative diseases.  相似文献   

3.
The principal source of hydrogen peroxide in mitochondria is thought to be from the dismutation of superoxide via the enzyme manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD). However, the nature of the effect of SOD on the cellular production of H(2)O(2) is not widely appreciated. The current paradigm is that the presence of SOD results in a lower level of H(2)O(2) because it would prevent the non-enzymatic reactions of superoxide that form H(2)O(2). The goal of this work was to: a) demonstrate that SOD can increase the flux of H(2)O(2), and b) use kinetic modelling to determine what kinetic and thermodynamic conditions result in SOD increasing the flux of H(2)O(2). We examined two biological sources of superoxide production (xanthine oxidase and coenzyme Q semiquinone, CoQ(*-) that have different thermodynamic and kinetic properties. We found that SOD could change the rate of formation of H(2)O(2) in cases where equilibrium-specific reactions form superoxide with an equilibrium constant (K) less than 1. An example is the formation of superoxide in the electron transport chain (ETC) of the mitochondria by the reaction of ubisemiquinone radical with dioxygen. We measured the rate of release of H(2)O(2) into culture medium from cells with differing levels of MnSOD. We found that the higher the level of SOD, the greater the rate of accumulation of H(2)O(2). Results with kinetic modelling were consistent with this observation; the steady-state level of H(2)O(2) increases if K<1, for example CoQ(*-)+O(2)-->CoQ+O(2)(*-). However, when K>1, e.g. xanthine oxidase forming O(2)(*-), SOD does not affect the steady state-level of H(2)O(2). Thus, the current paradigm that SOD will lower the flux of H(2)O(2) does not hold for the ETC. These observations indicate that MnSOD contributes to the flux of H(2)O(2) in cells and thereby is involved in establishing the cellular redox environment and thus the biological state of the cell.  相似文献   

4.
Red blood cells (RBC) are thought to be well protected against oxidative stress by the antioxidant, cu-pro-zinc enzyme superoxide dismutase (CuZn SOD) which dismutates O2- to H2O2. CuZn SOD, however, is irreversibly inactivated by its product H2O2. Exposure of intact RBC to H2O2 resulted in the inactivation (up to 50%) of endogenous SOD in a concentration-dependent manner. When RBC were exposed to O2- and H2O2, generated by xanthine + xanthine oxidase, an even greater loss of SOD activity (approximately 75%) was observed. Intracellular proteolysis was markedly increased by exposure to these same oxidants; up to a 12-fold increase with H2O2 and a 50-fold increase with xanthine oxidase plus xanthine. When purified SOD was treated with H2O2, inactivation of the enzyme also occurred in a concentration-dependent manner. Accompanying the loss of SOD activity, the binding of the copper ligand to the active site of the enzyme diminished with H2O2 exposure, as evidenced by an increase in accessible copper. Significant direct fragmentation of SOD was evident only under conditions of prolonged exposure (20 h) to relatively high concentrations of H2O2. Gel electrophoresis studies indicated that under most experimental conditions (i.e. 1-h incubation) H2O2, O2-, and H2O2 + O2- treated SOD experienced charge changes and partial denaturation, rather than fragmentation. The proteolytic susceptibility of H2O2-modified SOD, during subsequent incubation with (rabbit, bovine or human) red cell extracts also increased as a function of pretreatment with H2O2. Both enzyme inactivation and altered copper binding appeared to precede the increase in proteolytic susceptibility (whether measured as an effect of H2O2 concentration or as a function of the duration of H2O2 exposure). These results suggest that SOD inactivation and modification of copper binding are prerequisites for increased protein degradation. Proteolytic susceptibility was further enhanced by H2O2 exposure under alkaline conditions, suggesting that the hydroperoxide anion is the damaging species rather than H2O2 itself. In RBC extracts, the proteolysis of H2O2-modified SOD was inhibited by sulfhydryl reagents, serine reagents, transition metal chelators, and ATP; suggesting the existence of an ATP-independent proteolytic pathway of sulfhydryl, serine, and metalloproteases, and peptidases. The proteolytic activity was conserved in a "Fraction II" of both human and rabbit RBC, and was purified from rabbit reticulocytes and erythrocytes to a 670-kDa proteinase complex, for which we have suggested the trivial name macroxyproteinase. In erythrocytes macroxyproteinase may prevent the accumulation of H2O2-modified SOD.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
6.
Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase (SOD1) is an abundant, largely cytosolic enzyme that scavenges superoxide anions. The biological role of SOD1 is somewhat controversial because superoxide is thought to arise largely from the mitochondria where a second SOD (manganese SOD) already resides. Using bakers' yeast as a model, we demonstrate that Cu,Zn-SOD1 helps protect mitochondria from oxidative damage, as sod1Delta mutants show elevated protein carbonyls in this organelle. In accordance with this connection to mitochondria, a fraction of active SOD1 localizes within the intermembrane space (IMS) of mitochondria together with its copper chaperone, CCS. Neither CCS nor SOD1 contains typical N-terminal presequences for mitochondrial uptake; however, the mitochondrial accumulation of SOD1 is strongly influenced by CCS. When CCS synthesis is repressed, mitochondrial SOD1 is of low abundance, and conversely IMS SOD1 is very high when CCS is largely mitochondrial. The mitochondrial form of SOD1 is indeed protective against oxidative damage because yeast cells enriched for IMS SOD1 exhibit prolonged survival in the stationary phase, an established marker of mitochondrial oxidative stress. Cu,Zn-SOD1 in the mitochondria appears important for reactive oxygen physiology and may have critical implications for SOD1 mutations linked to the fatal neurodegenerative disorder, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.  相似文献   

7.
The observation that in isolated mitochondria electrons may leak out of the respiratory chain to form superoxide radicals (O(2)(radical-)) has prompted the assumption that O(2)(radical-) formation is a compulsory by-product of respiration. Since mitochondrial O(2)(radical-) formation under homeostatic conditions could not be demonstrated in situ so far, conclusions drawn from isolated mitochondria must be considered with precaution. The present study reveals a link between electron deviation from the respiratory chain to oxygen and the coupling state in the presence of antimycin A. Another important factor is the analytical system applied for the detection of activated oxygen species. Due to the presence of superoxide dismutase in mitochondria, O(2)(radical-) release cannot be realistically determined in intact mitochondria. We therefore followed the release of the stable dismutation product H(2)O(2) by comparing most frequently used H(2)O(2) detection methods. The possible interaction of the detection systems with the respiratory chain was avoided by a recently developed method, which was compared with conventional methods. Irrespective of the methods applied, the substrates used for respiration and the state of respiration established, intact mitochondria could not be made to release H(2)O(2) from dismutating O(2)(radical-). Although regular mitochondrial respiration is unlikely to supply single electrons for O(2)(radical-) formation our study does not exclude the possibility of the respiratory chain becoming a radical source under certain conditions.  相似文献   

8.
Copper and zinc containing superoxide dismutase (CuZnSOD) is located primarily in the cytosol but a small amount of the enzyme has also been identified in the intermembrane space of mitochondria (termed here IMS CuZnSOD). Using Saccharomyces cerevisiae mutants depleted of either isoform of VDAC (voltage-dependent anion-selective channel), we have shown that the activity of IMS CuZnSOD coincides with the presence of a given VDAC isoform and changes in a growth phase dependent way. Moreover, the IMS CuZnSOD activity correlates with the levels of O2*- release from mitochondria and the cytosol redox state. The latter in turn seems to influence the levels of the mitochondrial outer membrane channel protein other than VDAC. Thus, we conclude that in the case of S. cerevisiae both VDAC isoforms influence the IMS CuZnSOD activity and subsequently the expression levels of some mitochondrial proteins.  相似文献   

9.
The effects of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2, 1 nM-5 mM) on the tone of the rings of aorta precontracted with phenylephrine (PE) were studied in 4-5 months streptozotocin (STZ)-diabetic rats and their age-matched controls. H2O2 induced brief contraction before relaxation in endothelium-containing rings that was more pronounced in diabetic rats. Removal of the endothelium or pretreatment of rings with N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME, 100 microM) abolished H2O2-induced immediate and transient increase in tone, but preincubation with indomethacin (10 microM) had no effect on contractions induced by H2O2 in both group of animals. Pretreatment with L-NAME or indomethacin as well as absence of endothelium produced an inhibition of H2O2-induced relaxation that was more pronounced in diabetic rings. Chronically STZ-diabetes resulted in a significant increase in H2O2-induced maximum relaxation that was largely endothelium-dependent. Decreased sensitivity (pD2) of diabetic vessels to vasorelaxant action of H2O2 was normalized by superoxide dismutase (SOD, 80 U/ml). Pretreatment with SOD had no effect on H2O2-induced maximum relaxations in both group of animals but led to an increase in H2O2-induced contractions in control rats. When the rings pretreated with diethyldithiocarbamate (DETCA, 5 mM), H2O2 produced only contraction in control rats, and H2O2-induced relaxations were markedly depressed in diabetic rats. H2O2 did not affect the tone of intact or endothelium-denuded rings in the presence of catalase (2000 U/ml). Aminotriazole (AT, 10 mM) failed to affect H2O2-induced contractions or relaxations in all rings. Our observations suggest that increased production of oxygen-derived free radicals (OFRs) in diabetic state leads to a decrease in SOD activity resulting an increase in endogenous superoxide anions (O2*-), that is limited cytotoxic actions, and an increase in catalase activity resulting a decrease in both H2O2 concentrations and the production of harmful hydroxyl radical (*OH) in diabetic aorta in long-term. Present results indicate that increased vascular activity of H2O2 may be an important factor in the development of vascular disorders associated with chronically diabetes mellitus. Enhanced formation of *OH, that is a product of exogenous H2O2 and excess O2*, seems to be contribute to increased relaxations to exogenously added H2O2 in chronically diabetic vessels.  相似文献   

10.
Paraquat (PQ(2+)) is a prototypic toxin known to exert injurious effects through oxidative stress and bears a structural similarity to the Parkinson disease toxicant, 1-methyl-4-pheynlpyridinium. The cellular sources of PQ(2+)-induced reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, specifically in neuronal tissue, remain to be identified. The goal of this study was to determine the involvement of brain mitochondria in PQ(2+)-induced ROS production. Highly purified rat brain mitochondria were obtained using a Percoll density gradient method. PQ(2+)-induced hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) production was measured by fluorometric and polarographic methods. The production of H(2)O(2) was evaluated in the presence of inhibitors and modulators of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. The results presented here suggest that in the rat brain, (a) mitochondria are a principal cellular site of PQ(2+)-induced H(2)O(2) production, (b) PQ(2+)-induced H(2)O(2) production requires the presence of respiratory substrates, (c) complex III of the electron transport chain is centrally involved in H(2)O(2) production by PQ(2+), and (d) the mechanism by which PQ(2+) generates H(2)O(2) depends on the mitochondrial inner transmembrane potential. These observations were further confirmed by measuring PQ(2+)-induced H(2)O(2) production in primary neuronal cells derived from the midbrain. These findings shed light on the mechanism through which mitochondria may contribute to ROS production by other environmental and endogenous redox cycling agents implicated in Parkinson's disease.  相似文献   

11.
The existence of a relationship between clofibrate-induced peroxisome proliferation and oxidative stress mediated by activated oxygen species was studied in intact peroxisomes purified from Pisum sativum L. plants. Incubation of leaves with 1 mM clofibrate produced a remarkable increase in the peroxisomal activity of acyl-CoA oxidase and, to a lesser extent, of xanthine oxidase, whereas there was a nearly complete loss of catalase activity and a decrease in Mn-superoxide dismutase. Ultrastructural studies of intact leaves showed that clofibrate induced a five- and twofold proliferation of the peroxisomal and mitochondrial populations, respectively, in comparison with those in control leaves. Prolonged incubation with clofibrate produced considerable alterations in the ultrastructure of cells. In peroxisomal membranes, the NADH-induced generation of O2- radicals, as well as the lipid peroxidation of membranes, increased as a result of treatment of plants with clofibrate. In intact peroxisomes treated with this hypolipidemic drug, the H2O2 concentration was higher than in peroxisomes from control plants. These results demonstrate that clofibrate stimulates the production of activated oxygen species (O2- and H2O2) inside peroxisomes, as well as the lipid peroxidation of peroxisomal membranes. This effect is concomitant with a decrease of catalase and Mn-SOD activities, the main peroxisomal enzymatic defenses against H2O2 and O2-, and indicates that in the toxicity of clofibrate, at the level of peroxisomes, an oxidative stress mechanism mediated by activated oxygen species is involved.  相似文献   

12.
At the concentrations usually employed as a Ca2+ indicator, arsenazo III underwent a one-electron reduction by rat liver mitochondria to produce an azo anion radical as demonstrated by electron-spin resonance spectroscopy. Either NADH or NADPH could serve as a source of reducing equivalents for the production of this free radical by intact rat liver mitochondria. Under aerobic conditions, addition of arsenazo III to rat liver mitochondria produced an increase in electron flow from NAD(P)H to molecular oxygen, generating superoxide anion. NAD(P)H generated from endogenous mitochondrial NAD(P)+ by intramitochondrial reactions could not be used for the NAD(P)H azoreductase reaction unless the mitochondria were solubilized by detergent or anaerobiosis. In addition, NAD(P)H azoreductase activity was higher in the crude outer mitochondrial membrane fraction than in mitoplasts and intact mitochondria. The steady-state concentration of the azo anion radical and the arsenazo III-stimulated cyanide-insensitive oxygen consumption were enhanced by calcium and magnesium, suggesting that, in addition to an enhanced azo anion radical-stabilization by complexation with the metal ions, enhanced reduction of arsenazo III also occurred. Accordingly, addition of cations to crude outer mitochondrial membrane preparations increased arsenazo III-stimulated cyanide-insensitive O2 consumption, H2O2 formation, and NAD(P)H oxidation. Antipyrylazo III was much less effective than arsenazo III in increasing superoxide anion formation by rat liver mitochondria and gave a much weaker electron spin resonance spectrum of an azo anion radical. These results provide direct evidence of an azoreductase activity associated with the outer mitochondrial membrane and of a stimulation of arsenazo III reduction by cations.  相似文献   

13.
Oxidative stress, resulting from accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), plays a critical role on astrocyte death associated with neurodegenerative diseases. Astroglial cells produce endozepines, a family of biologically active peptides that have been implicated in cell protection. Thus, the purpose of the present study was to investigate the potential protective effect of one of the endozepines, the octadecaneuropeptide ODN, on hydrogen peroxide (H(2) O(2) )-induced oxidative stress and cell death in rat astrocytes. Incubation of cultured astrocytes with graded concentrations of H(2) O(2) for 1 h provoked a dose-dependent reduction of the number of living cells as evaluated by lactate dehydrogenase assay. The cytotoxic effect of H(2) O(2) was associated with morphological modifications that were characteristic of apoptotic cell death. H(2) O(2) -treated cells exhibited high level of ROS associated with a reduction of both superoxide dismutases (SOD) and catalase activities. Pre-treatment of astrocytes with low concentrations of ODN dose-dependently prevented cell death induced by H(2) O(2) . This effect was accompanied by a marked attenuation of ROS accumulation, reduction of mitochondrial membrane potential and activation of caspase 3 activity. ODN stimulated SOD and catalase activities in a concentration-dependent manner, and blocked H(2) O(2) -evoked inhibition of SOD and catalase activities. Blockers of SOD and catalase suppressed the effect of ODN on cell survival. Taken together, these data demonstrate for the first time that ODN is a potent protective agent that prevents oxidative stress-induced apoptotic cell death.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Previously, we demonstrated JNK plays a central role in acetaminophen (APAP)-induced liver injury (Gunawan, B. K., Liu, Z. X., Han, D., Hanawa, N., Gaarde, W. A., and Kaplowitz, N. (2006) Gastroenterology 131, 165-178). In this study, we examine the mechanism involved in activating JNK and explore the downstream targets of JNK important in promoting APAP-induced liver injury in vivo. JNK inhibitor (SP600125) was observed to significantly protect against APAP-induced liver injury. Increased mitochondria-derived reactive oxygen species were implicated in APAP-induced JNK activation based on the following: 1) mitochondrial GSH depletion (maximal at 2 h) caused increased H2O2 release from mitochondria, which preceded JNK activation (maximal at 4 h); 2) treatment of isolated hepatocytes with H2O2 or inhibitors (e.g. antimycin) that cause increased H2O2 release from mitochondria-activated JNK. An important downstream target of JNK following activation was mitochondria based on the following: 1) JNK translocated to mitochondria following activation; 2) JNK inhibitor treatment partially protected against a decline in mitochondria respiration caused by APAP treatment; and 3) addition of purified active JNK to mitochondria isolated from mice treated with APAP plus JNK inhibitor (mitochondria with severe GSH depletion, covalent binding) directly inhibited respiration. Cyclosporin A blocked the inhibitory effect of JNK on mitochondria respiration, suggesting JNK was directly inducing mitochondrial permeability transition in isolated mitochondria from mice treated with APAP plus JNK inhibitor. Addition of JNK to mitochondria isolated from control mice did not affect respiration. Our results suggests that APAP-induced liver injury involves JNK activation, due to increased reactive oxygen species generated by GSH-depleted mitochondria, and translocation of activated JNK to mitochondria where JNK induces mitochondrial permeability transition and inhibits mitochondria bioenergetics.  相似文献   

16.
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) have been widely implicated in the pathogenesis of diabetes and more recently in mitochondrial alterations in skeletal muscle of diabetic mice. However, so far the exact sources of ROS in skeletal muscle have remained elusive. Aiming at better understanding the causes of mitochondrial alterations in diabetic muscle, we designed this study to characterize the sites of ROS production in skeletal muscle of streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic mice. Hyperglycemic STZ mice showed increased markers of systemic and muscular oxidative stress, as evidenced by increased circulating H(2)O(2) and muscle carbonylated protein levels. Interestingly, insulin treatment reduced hyperglycemia and improved systemic and muscular oxidative stress in STZ mice. We demonstrated that increased oxidative stress in muscle of STZ mice is associated with an increase of xanthine oxidase (XO) expression and activity and is mediated by an induction of H(2)O(2) production by both mitochondria and XO. Finally, treatment of STZ mice, as well as high-fat and high-sucrose diet-fed mice, with oxypurinol reduced markers of systemic and muscular oxidative stress and prevented structural and functional mitochondrial alterations, confirming the in vivo relevance of XO in ROS production in diabetic mice. These data indicate that mitochondria and XO are the major sources of hyperglycemia-induced ROS production in skeletal muscle and that the inhibition of XO reduces oxidative stress and improves mitochondrial alterations in diabetic muscle.  相似文献   

17.
The heme protein indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) initiates oxidative metabolism of tryptophan along the kynurenine pathway, and this requires reductive activation of Fe(3+)-IDO. The current dogma is that superoxide anion radical (O(2)(*-)) is responsible for this activation, based largely on previous work employing purified rabbit IDO and rabbit enterocytes. We have re-investigated this role of O(2)(*-) using purified recombinant human IDO (rhIDO), rabbit enterocytes that constitutively express IDO, human endothelial cells, and monocyte-derived macrophages treated with interferon-gamma to induce IDO expression, and two cell lines transfected with the human IDO gene. Both potassium superoxide and O(2)(*-) generated by xanthine oxidase modestly activated rhIDO, in reactions that were prevented completely by superoxide dismutase (SOD). In contrast, SOD mimetics had no effect on IDO activity in enterocytes and interferon-gamma-treated human cells, despite significantly decreasing cellular O(2)(*-) Similarly, cellular IDO activity was unaffected by increasing SOD activity via co-expression of Cu,Zn-SOD or by increasing cellular O(2)(*-) via treatment of cells with menadione. Other reductants, such as tetrahydrobiopterin, ascorbate, and cytochrome P450 reductase, were ineffective in activating cellular IDO. However, recombinant human cytochrome b(5) plus cytochrome P450 reductase and NADPH reduced Fe(3+)-IDO to Fe(2+)-IDO and activated rhIDO in a reconstituted system, a reaction inhibited marginally by SOD. Additionally, short interfering RNA-mediated knockdown of microsomal cytochrome b(5) significantly decreased IDO activity in IDO-transfected cells. Together, our data show that cytochrome b(5) rather than O(2)(*-) plays a major role in the activation of IDO in human cells.  相似文献   

18.
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), the most common motor neuron disease in adults, is characterized by the selective degeneration and death of motor neurons leading to progressive paralysis and eventually death. Approximately 20% of familial ALS cases are associated with mutations in SOD1, the gene encoding Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase (CuZnSOD). Previously, we reported that overexpression of the mitochondrial antioxidant manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD or SOD2) attenuates cytotoxicity induced by expression of the G37R-SOD1 mutant in a human neuroblastoma cell culture model of ALS. In the present study, we extended these earlier findings using several different SOD1 mutants (G93C, G85R, and I113T). Additionally, we tested the hypothesis that mutant SOD1 increases mitochondrial-produced superoxide (O(2) (*)) levels and that SOD2 overexpression protects neurons from mutant SOD1-induced toxicity by reducing O(2) (*) levels in mitochondria. In the present study, we demonstrate that SOD2 overexpression markedly attenuates the neuronal toxicity induced by adenovirus-mediated expression of all four SOD1 mutants (G37R, G93C, G85R, or I113T) tested. Utilizing the mitochondrial-targeted O(2) (*)-sensitive fluorogenic probe MitoSOX Red, we observed a significant increase in mitochondrial O(2) (*) levels in neural cells expressing mutant SOD1. These elevated O(2) (*) levels in mitochondria were significantly diminished by the overexpression of SOD2. These data suggest that mitochondrial-produced O(2) (*) radicals play a critical role in mutant SOD1-mediated neuronal toxicity and implicate mitochondrial-produced free radicals as potential therapeutic targets in ALS.  相似文献   

19.
The role of intracellular oxyradicals in H2O2 and neutrophil-induced cytotoxicity is suggested by previous studies showing protection by inhibitors such as deferroxamine, dimethylthiourea, and dimethyl sulfoxide. In the current studies, the role of intracellular O2- is specifically examined by evaluating the effects of intracellular superoxide dismutase (SOD) supplementation on cytotoxicity of rat pulmonary artery endothelial cells induced by H2O2 and activated neutrophils. To minimize in vitro manipulation, supplementation was accomplished by incubating endothelial cells in the presence of SOD (1-20 mg/mL). Increases up to greater than 17-fold the baseline SOD activity were achievable using this approach, with uptake being maximal after 6 h of incubation. This increase was resistant to trypsin digestion, suggesting the intracellular location of SOD. Compared to controls, SOD-supplemented cells showed significantly increased resistance to killing by H2O2 and activated neutrophils. Inactive SOD failed to provide protection. The degree of protection was dependent on the dose of cytotoxic agent and the extent of SOD supplementation. The results provide new evidence that intracellular O2- participates in the killing process induced by these two stimuli. The intracellular source of O2- remains to be determined, although previous studies suggest xanthine oxidase as a likely candidate.  相似文献   

20.
Redox regulation is critical for a number of cellular functions and has been implicated in the etiology and progression of several diseases, such as cardiovascular diseases, neurodegenerative diseases, and cancer. It has been shown that, in the absence of gamma-interferon inducible lysosomal thiol reductase (GILT), cells are under increased oxidative stress with higher superoxide levels and decreased stability, expression, and function of mitochondrial manganese superoxide dismutase (SOD2). Here, we further elucidate the role of GILT in the homeostatic regulation of oxidative stress. We show that GILT-deficient fibroblasts exhibit reduced glutathione levels, shift in GSSG/GSH ratio toward the oxidized form, and accumulate dysfunctional mitochondria. Redox-sensitive pathways involving Erk1/2 activation and nuclear high mobility group box 1 (HMGB1) protein cytosolic translocation are both activated and associated with increased autophagy in GILT−/− fibroblasts. We hypothesize that these events are responsible for degrading the damaged mitochondria and mitochondrial SOD2 in the absence of GILT. This is the first time to our knowledge that a lysosomal enzyme has been implicated in global effects within the cell.  相似文献   

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