Search results for "permeability transition pore"
showing 4 items of 24 documents
Mitochondrial oxidative stress and CD95 ligand: A dual mechanism for hepatocyte apoptosis in chronic alcoholism
2002
Apoptosis plays an important role in the progression of alcohol-induced liver disease to cirrhosis. Oxidative stress is an early event in the development of apoptosis. The major aim of this study was to study the conditions in which oxidative stress occurs in chronic alcoholism and its relationship with apoptosis of hepatocytes. We have found that oxidative stress is associated with chronic ethanol consumption in humans and in rats, in the former independently of the existence of alcohol-induced liver disease. Ethanol or acetaldehyde induces apoptosis in hepatocytes isolated from alcoholic rats, but not in those from control rats. Inhibition of aldehyde dehydrogenase, but not of cytochrome …
The Relationship between Alcohol–induced Apoptosis and Oxidative Stress in the Liver
2005
This chapter discusses the relationship of apoptosis and oxidative stress induced by alcohol in the liver. Oxidative stress is involved in the pathogenesis and progression of alcohol-induced liver disease. Chronic alcoholism always causes oxidative stress independently of the presence of liver disease. Two key mechanisms are responsible for it: (1) the mitochondrial respiratory chain and (2) cytochrome P450 2El activity. Increased production of reactive oxygen species at complexes I and III together with NADH overproduction would be the major cause for mitochondrial oxidative stress in chronic alcoholism. Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) cause oxidative damage, which may lead to cell death by …
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).
Aging of the liver: Age-associated mitochondrial damage in intact hepatocytes
1996
Mitochondrial damage may be a major cause of cellular aging. So far, this hypothesis had only been tested using isolated mitochondria. The aim of this study was to investigate the involvement of mitochondria in aging using whole liver cells and not isolated mitochondria only. Using flow cytometry, we found that age is associated with a decrease in mitochondrial membrane potential (30%), an increase in mitochondrial size, and an increase in mitochondrial peroxide generation (23%). Intracellular peroxide levels were also increased. The number of mitochondria per cell and inner mitochondrial membrane mass did not change. Gluconeogenesis from glycerol or fructose (mitochondrial-independent) did…