Search results for "Reactive"

showing 10 items of 1469 documents

Senescence and p130/Rbl2: a new beginning to the end.

2009

Senescence is the process of cellular aging dependent on the normal physiological functions of non-immortalized cells. With increasing data being uncovered in this field, the complex molecular web regulating senescence is gradually being unraveled. Recent studies have suggested two main phases of senescence, the triggering of senescence and the maintenance of senescence. Each has been supported by data implying precise roles for DNA methyltransferases, reactive oxygen species and other factors. We will first summarize the data supporting these claims and then highlight the specific role that we hypothesize that p130/Rbl2 plays in the modulation of the senescence process.

chemistry.chemical_classificationSenescenceReactive oxygen speciesMethyltransferaseRetinoblastoma-Like Protein p130PhysiologyCell Cycle ProteinsCell BiologyBiologyTelomereCell biologychemistryCellular AgingHumansMolecular BiologyCellular SenescenceCell research
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Racemic and Optically Pure Heptahelicene-2-carboxylic Acid: Its Synthesis and Self-Assembly into Nanowire-Like Aggregates

2010

Heptahelicene-2-carboxylic acid was effectively synthesised from suitably functionalised naphthalene building blocks. Methoxy-substituted 1,1'-ethyne-1,2-diylbis(2-but-3-yn-1-ylnaphthalene) was cyclised in the presence of CpCo(CO)(2)/PPh(3) to 2-methoxy-7,8,11,12-tetrahydroheptahelicene, which was converted into heptahelicen-2-yl trifluoromethanesulfonate. This reactive intermediate underwent Pd(OAc)(2)/dppp-catalysed methoxycarbonylation reaction to provide, after hydrolysis, heptahelicene-2-carboxylic acid. The racemate was resolved into enantiomers by semipreparative HPLC on a chiral column. The helicity of (+)-(P)-heptahelicene-2-carboxylic acid was assigned by correlating its CD spectr…

chemistry.chemical_classificationStereochemistryCarboxylic acidOrganic ChemistryReactive intermediateArenes530High-performance liquid chromatographyNanostructureschemistry.chemical_compoundHydrolysisScanning probechemistryAlkynesPolymer chemistryCyclotrimerisationmicroscopySelf-assemblyPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryEnantiomerTrifluoromethanesulfonateNaphthaleneEuropean Journal of Organic Chemistry
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Oxidative DNA Damage Profiles in Mammalian Cells

1997

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are formed inside cells not only under the influence of exogenous agents (visible light, ionizing radiation, and many oxidants such as peroxides or quinones), but also under normal (physiological) conditions as byproducts of oxygen metabolism and other cellular redox reactions (Pryor 1986; Halliwell and Gutteridge 1986; Sies 1986; Clayson et al. 1994). ROS such as hydroxyl radicals and singlet oxygen are a serious threat to the integrity of the cellular genome, since they efficiently react with DNA to generate many types of DNA modifications, at least some of which are pre- mutagenic (Breimer 1990; Halliwell and Aruoma 1991; Epe 1991; Feig et al. 1994). Steady-…

chemistry.chemical_classificationchemistry.chemical_compoundReactive oxygen specieschemistryBiochemistryDNA repairSinglet oxygenRadicalAcridine orangeOxidative phosphorylationGenomeDNA
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Mitochondrial Oxidative Stress in Diabetes

2014

Abstract Diabetes is a multifactorial disease associated with serious comorbidities. This condition has been related to oxidative stress and, as a consequence, to overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which are known to be produced by different sources in diabetes. Excessive production of ROS can be harmful, making antioxidant defenses of vital importance. Dietary antioxidants, such as vitamin E or vitamin C, polyphenols and flavonoids have been used to modulate the oxidative stress created in diabetes, producing contradictory results in clinical trials, perhaps as a consequence of the targets selected and/or the design of the studies in question. This chapter considers the proce…

chemistry.chemical_classificationmedicine.medical_specialtyReactive oxygen speciesAntioxidantVitamin Cmedicine.medical_treatmentVitamin EDiseaseBiologyMitochondrionPharmacologymedicine.disease_causemedicine.diseaseEndocrinologychemistryInternal medicineDiabetes mellitusmedicineOxidative stress
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Exercise as an antioxidant: it up-regulates important enzymes for cell adaptations to exercise

2006

Abstract Aims. – To assess the role of the reactive oxygen species (ROS) in cell signalling and in the regulation of gene expression. Methods. – Exercise causes oxidative stress only when exhaustive. Strenuous exercise causes oxidation of glutathione, release of cytosolic enzymes, and other signs of cell damage. We have tested this hypothesis by studying the effect of inhibition of ROS production by allopurinol (an inhibitor of xanthine oxidase, a free radical generating enzyme) on cell signalling pathways in marathon runners and in rats submitted to exhaustive exercise by running on a treadmill. Results. – Exercise caused an activation of NF-κB in lymphocytes from marathon runners which wa…

chemistry.chemical_classificationmedicine.medical_specialtyReactive oxygen speciesAntioxidantbiologymedicine.medical_treatmentAllopurinolPhysical exercisemedicine.diseasemedicine.disease_causeSuperoxide dismutasechemistry.chemical_compoundEndocrinologychemistryInternal medicinemedicinebiology.proteinOrthopedics and Sports MedicineXanthine oxidasehuman activitiesCell damageOxidative stressmedicine.drugScience & Sports
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Oxygen Radical Scavengers

2010

The myocardium can tolerate only relatively short periods of total myocardial ischemia without myocardial cell death. Following short ischemic periods, ischemic damage is reversible by reperfusion. However, with increasing duration and severity of ischemia, the damage inflicted to cardiomyocytes following reperfusion becomes irreversible. The combined pathologic events in the myocardium that follow a critical period of ischemia and leading to either reversible or irreversible damage to both cardiomyocytes and cardiac microvasculature is known as ischemia-reperfusion injury (Goldhaber and Weiss 1992).

chemistry.chemical_classificationmedicine.medical_specialtyReactive oxygen speciesMyocardial ischemiabusiness.industryRadicalIschemiaIntracellular reactive oxygen speciesmedicine.diseasechemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryMitochondrial permeability transition poreInternal medicinemedicineCardiologyMyocardial cellcardiovascular diseasesXanthine oxidasebusiness
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Nitroglycerin-Induced Endothelial Dysfunction and Tolerance Involve Adverse Phosphorylation and S -Glutathionylation of Endothelial Nitric Oxide Synt…

2011

Objective— Continuous administration of nitroglycerin (GTN) causes tolerance and endothelial dysfunction by inducing reactive oxygen species (ROS) production from various enzymatic sources, such as mitochondria, NADPH oxidase, and an uncoupled endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS). In the present study, we tested the effects of type 1 angiotensin (AT 1 )-receptor blockade with telmisartan on GTN-induced endothelial dysfunction in particular on eNOS phosphorylation and S -glutathionylation sites and the eNOS cofactor synthesizing enzyme GTP–cyclohydrolase I. Methods and Results— Wistar rats were treated with telmisartan (2.7 or 8 mg/kg per day PO for 10 days) and with GTN (50 mg/kg per d…

chemistry.chemical_classificationmedicine.medical_specialtyReactive oxygen speciesNADPH oxidasebiologyEndotheliummedicine.diseasemedicine.disease_causebiology.organism_classificationNitric oxide synthasemedicine.anatomical_structureEndocrinologychemistryEnosInternal medicinemedicinebiology.proteinTelmisartanEndothelial dysfunctionCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicineOxidative stressmedicine.drugArteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology
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Microcirculatory Dysfunction Induced by Cigarette Smoking

2000

This review deals with the deleterious effects of cigarette smoking on the microcirculation, both in terms of morphological (i.e., vessel wall injury, capillary loss) and functional aspects. The latter concerns predominantly changes in tissue perfusion and its regulatory mechanisms (i.e., reactive hyperemia, sequestration of blood cells in the microcirculation). The mechanisms of action of cigarette smoking on the microcirculation include compromised endothelial-dependent vasorelaxation, platelet aggregation, endothelial cell dysfunction, and the activation of circulating leukocytes. Through these mechanisms, cigarette smoking elicits the aggregation and adhesion of leukocytes and/or platel…

chemistry.chemical_classificationmedicine.medical_specialtyReactive oxygen speciesPathologyPhysiologybusiness.industryCell adhesion moleculeHamsterMicrocirculationEndothelial stem cellEndocrinologychemistryPhysiology (medical)Internal medicinemedicinePlateletCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessMolecular BiologyReactive hyperemiaPerfusionMicrocirculation
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Diabetic Retinopathy and Oxidative Stress

2014

Abstract Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is the leading cause of acquired blindness in working age adults worldwide. Biochemical changes in DR contribute to both the microscopic structural and functional changes in the retina. All these alterations result in macroscopic retinal damage that can be assessed by funduscopy. The overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the mitochondria is considered a causal link between elevated glucose and biochemical abnormalities in the pathophysiology of DR. Moreover, oxidatively induced pathways also seem to provide positive feedback to ROS production, resulting in a vicious cycle. ROS can directly damage lipids, proteins and DNA, leading to cell death…

chemistry.chemical_classificationmedicine.medical_specialtyReactive oxygen speciesProgrammed cell deathDiabetic retinopathyMitochondrionBiologymedicine.diseasemedicine.disease_causeProinflammatory cytokineVascular endothelial growth factorchemistry.chemical_compoundEndocrinologychemistryInternal medicineDiabetes mellitusImmunologymedicineOxidative stress
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G6PD Overexpression Protects Mice Against Associated Oxidative Stress and Delays the Occurrence of Frailty

2016

To assess the impact of lifelong overexpression of G6PD on reactive oxygen species (ROS)-derived damage and the prevention of frailty, we measured the levels of macromolecular oxidative damage in young and old mice and the we tested the neuromuscular fitness and the grip strength in old mice. Old G6PD-Tg male and female mice showed diminished accumulation of DNA oxidation (measured as 8-hydroxyguanosine or 8-OHdG) in liver and brain. Old females also showed reduced lipid oxidation (measured as malondialdehyde or MDA) in the liver. Old G6PD-Tg males, but not females, presented a small but significant increase in brain protein carbonylation. In accordance with these findings, liver from 2-yea…

chemistry.chemical_classificationmedicine.medical_specialtyReactive oxygen speciesProtein CarbonylationGlutathioneDNA oxidationBiologyMalondialdehydemedicine.disease_causeBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundGrip strengthEndocrinologychemistryLipid oxidationPhysiology (medical)Internal medicineImmunologymedicineOxidative stressFree Radical Biology and Medicine
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