6533b871fe1ef96bd12d0f91
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Mitochondrial redox signaling: Interaction of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species with other sources of oxidative stress.
Andreas DaiberPhilip WenzelThomas MünzelEberhard Schulzsubject
Heart DiseasesPhysiologyClinical BiochemistryMitochondrionmedicine.disease_causeBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundmedicineAnimalsHumansXanthine oxidaseMolecular BiologyGeneral Environmental Sciencechemistry.chemical_classificationInflammationReactive oxygen speciesNADPH oxidasebiologyNADPH OxidasesCell BiologyForum Review ArticlesAngiotensin IICell biologyMitochondriaNitric oxide synthaseCrosstalk (biology)Oxidative StressBiochemistrychemistrybiology.proteinGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesReactive Oxygen SpeciesOxidation-ReductionOxidative stressSignal Transductiondescription
Significance: Oxidative stress is a well established hallmark of cardiovascular disease and there is strong evidence for a causal role of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (RONS) therein. Recent Advances: Improvement of cardiovascular complications by genetic deletion of RONS producing enzymes and overexpression of RONS degrading enzymes proved the involvement of these species in cardiovascular disease at a molecular level. Vice versa, overexpression of RONS producing enzymes as well as deletion of antioxidant enzymes was demonstrated to aggravate cardiovascular complications. Critical Issues: With the present overview we present and discuss different pathways how mitochondrial RONS interact (crosstalk) with other sources of oxidative stress, namely NADPH oxidases, xanthine oxidase and an uncoupled nitric oxide synthase. The potential mechanisms of how this crosstalk proceeds are discussed in detail. Several examples from the literature are summarized (including hypoxia, angiotensin II mediated vascular dysfunction, cellular starvation, nitrate tolerance, aging, hyperglycemia, β-amyloid stress and others) and the underlying mechanisms are put together to a more general concept of redox-based activation of different sources of RONS via enzyme-specific “redox switches”. Mitochondria play a key role in this concept providing redox triggers for oxidative damage in the cardiovascular system but also act as amplifiers to increase the burden of oxidative stress. Future Directions: Based on these considerations, the characterization of the role of mitochondrial RONS formation in cardiac disease as well as inflammatory processes but also the role of mitochondria as potential therapeutic targets in these pathophysiological states should be addressed in more detail in the future. Antioxid. Redox Signal. 20, 308–324.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2014-01-10 | Antioxidantsredox signaling |