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On page 3 showing 41 ~ 60 papers out of 193 papers

Calcium vs. iron-mediated processes in hydrogen peroxide toxicity to L929 cells: effects of glucose.

  • E E Lomonosova‎ et al.
  • Free radical biology & medicine‎
  • 1998‎

H2O2 toxicity was studied in L929 cells in the presence and absence of glucose. The data obtained in the absence of glucose suggest a Ca2+-dependent mechanism of cell injury. No evidence was found for any involvement of iron in the process. In particular, cell injury was unaffected by the intracellular iron chelators 2,2'-dipyridyl and deferoxamine or by the hydroxyl radical scavengers DMSO and DMPO. On the other hand, the intracellular Ca2+ chelator BAPTA/AM provided significant protection. The cytosolic Ca2+ level rapidly and consistently increased after H2O2 addition, prior to visible bleb formation and loss of cell viability. Additionally, GSH not only prevented cell death but also significantly decreased cytosolic calcium accumulation. In the presence of glucose, however, Ca2+ does not seem to play any role in H2O2 toxicity. Cell death is now mainly mediated by iron: the iron chelators and hydroxyl radical scavengers prevented cell injury, the increase in cytosolic Ca2+ was significantly less pronounced, and BAPTA/AM did not exert any protection under these conditions. Hence, the metabolic state of the L929 cells, as given by the availability of glucose, decisively determines the biochemical mechanism of H2O2 cell injury.


Morphohistometric analysis of the effects of Coriandrum sativum on cortical and cerebellar neurotoxicity.

  • Hesham N Mustafa‎
  • Avicenna journal of phytomedicine‎
  • 2021‎

Natural compounds can act as metal chelators and oxygen free radical scavengers, which allows them to be used as bioactive antagonists to heavy metals neurotoxicity. The aim of the study to analyze the morphometric effects of Coriandrum sativum (C. sativum) on lead-induced neurotoxicity.


Multifactorial anticancer effects of digalloyl-resveratrol encompass apoptosis, cell-cycle arrest, and inhibition of lymphendothelial gap formation in vitro.

  • S Madlener‎ et al.
  • British journal of cancer‎
  • 2010‎

Digalloyl-resveratrol (di-GA) is a synthetic compound aimed to combine the biological effects of the plant polyhydroxy phenols gallic acid and resveratrol, which are both radical scavengers and cyclooxygenase inhibitors exhibiting anticancer activity. Their broad spectrum of activities may probably be due to adjacent free hydroxyl groups.


Oxygen levels do not determine radiation survival of breast cancer stem cells.

  • Chann Lagadec‎ et al.
  • PloS one‎
  • 2012‎

For more than a century oxygen has been known to be one of the most powerful radiosensitizers. However, despite decades of preclinical and clinical research aimed at overcoming tumor hypoxia, little clinical progress has been made so far. Ionizing radiation damages DNA through generation of free radicals. In the presence of oxygen these lesions are chemically modified, and thus harder to repair while hypoxia protects cells from radiation (Oxygen enhancement ratio (OER)). Breast cancer stem cells (BSCSs) are protected from radiation by high levels of free radical scavengers even in the presence of oxygen. This led us to hypothesize that BCSCs exhibit an OER of 1. Using four established breast cancer cell lines (MCF-7, T47D, MDA-MB-231, SUM159PT) and primary breast cancer samples, we determined the number of BCSCs using cancer stem cell markers (ALDH1, low proteasome activity), compared radiation clonogenic survival and mammosphere formation under normoxic and hypoxic conditions, and correlated these results to the expression levels of key members of the free radical scavenging systems. The number of BCSCs increased with increased aggressiveness of the cancer. This correlated with increased radioresistance (SF(8Gy)), and decreasing OERs. When cultured as mammospheres, breast cancer cell lines and primary samples were highly radioresistant and not further protected by hypoxia (OER∼1).We conclude that because BCSCs are protected from radiation through high expression levels of free radical scavengers, hypoxia does not lead to additional radioprotection of BCSCs.


Carbonyl stress and NMDA receptor activation contribute to methylglyoxal neurotoxicity.

  • Susana Garcia de Arriba‎ et al.
  • Free radical biology & medicine‎
  • 2006‎

Methylglyoxal (MG) is a reactive alpha-ketoaldehyde physiologically generated as a by-product of glycolysis. MG that is able to form protein adducts resulting in advanced glycation end products accumulates under conditions associated with neurodegeneration such as impaired glucose metabolism or oxidative stress. In the present study, short-term exposure of human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells to MG was associated with an early depolarization of the plasma membrane, glutamate release, and formation of reactive oxygen species. In addition, long-term exposure (24 h) of SH-SY5Y cells to MG caused a decrease in cell viability, intracellular ATP, and rhodamine 123 (Rh-123) fluorescence. ATP depletion and the decrease in Rh-123 fluorescence were prevented by carbonyl scavengers, the nitric oxide synthase inhibitor L-NAME, and N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonists. Furthermore, the MG-induced glutamate release and the loss in cell viability were prevented by NMDA receptor antagonists. Therefore, MG renders cells more vulnerable to excitotoxicity. In conclusion, carbonyl scavengers as well as NMDA receptor antagonists may represent effective therapeutic tools to reduce the risk of pathophysiological changes associated with carbonyl stress in neurodegenerative diseases.


Xanthine oxidase-derived superoxide causes reoxygenation injury of ischemic cerebral endothelial cells.

  • J W Beetsch‎ et al.
  • Brain research‎
  • 1998‎

Oxygen free radicals, generated by cerebral ischemia, have been widely implicated in the damage of vascular endothelium. Endothelial cells have been proposed as a significant source of oxygen free radicals. In the present study, we developed an anoxia-reoxygenation (AX/RO) model using pure cultures of cerebral endothelial cells (CECs) isolated from piglet cortex to measure CEC oxygen free radical production and determine its role in AX/RO-induced CEC injury. CEC injury, as measured by lactate dehydrogenase efflux into the culture medium, increased progressively with the duration of anoxic exposure, becoming significant after 10 h. Reoxygenation significantly increased CEC anoxic injury in a time-dependent manner. A 55% increase in oxygen free radical production, determined by fluorescence detection of dihydroethidium oxidation, was measured at the end of 4-h reoxygenation in CECs subjected to AX/RO conditions that killed 40% of the cells. Blockade of oxygen free radical production with superoxide dismutase (SOD; 250 and 1000 U/ml) or oxypurinol (50 and 200 microM), a potent xanthine oxidase inhibitor, reduced this injury by 32-36% and 30-39%, respectively. Results from our in vitro model indicate that CECs produce significant amounts of oxygen free radicals following ischemia, primarily from the xanthine oxidase pathway. These radicals ultimately have a cytotoxic effect on the very cells that produced them. Thus, reductions in oxygen free radical-mediated vascular injury may contribute to improvements in neurophysiologic outcome following treatment with oxygen free radical inhibitors and scavengers.


Modulation of arachidonic acid metabolism by phenols: relation to their structure and antioxidant/prooxidant properties.

  • J Alanko‎ et al.
  • Free radical biology & medicine‎
  • 1999‎

The effects of substituted catechols (3-methylcatechol, 4-methylcatechol, 4-nitrocatechol, and guaiacol) and trihydroxybenzenes (pyrogallol, propyl gallate, 1,2,4-trihydroxybenzene, and 1,3,5-trihydroxybenzene) on the synthesis of prostaglandin (PG)E2 and leukotriene (LT)B4 were tested in human A23187-stimulated polymorphonuclear leukocytes. The effects were related to their peroxyl-radical-scavenging (antioxidant), superoxide-scavenging (antioxidant), and superoxide-generating (prooxidant) properties. In general, compounds with hydroxyl groups in the ortho position increased PGE2/LTB4 ratio, and compounds with hydroxyl groups in the meta position decreased PGE2/LTB4 ratio. Catechols, which have hydroxyl groups in the ortho position, were the most potent peroxyl radical and superoxide anion scavengers. Trihydroxybenzenes (pyrogallol, 1,2,4-trihydroxybenzene, and 1,3,5-trihydroxybenzene) generated superoxide, whereas dihydroxybenzenes did not. Thus, the positions and number of hydroxyl groups seem to be the most important properties determining the action of phenolic compounds on PGE2/LTB4 ratio and their antioxidant/prooxidant activities.


Trans-4-oxo-2-nonenal potently alters mitochondrial function.

  • Matthew J Picklo‎ et al.
  • Free radical biology & medicine‎
  • 2011‎

Alzheimer disease elevates lipid peroxidation in the brain and data indicate that the resulting lipid-aldehydes are pathological effectors of lipid peroxidation. The disposition of 4-substituted nonenals derived from arachidonate (20:4, n-6) and linoleate (18:2, n-6) oxidation is modulated by their protein adduction targets, their metabolism, and the nature of the 4-substitutent. Trans-4-oxo-2-nonenal (4-ONE) has a higher toxicity in some systems than the more commonly studied trans-4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE). In this work, we performed a structure-function analysis of 4-hydroxy/oxoalkenal upon mitochondrial endpoints. We tested the hypotheses that 4-ONE, owing to a highly reactive nature, is more toxic than HNE and that HNE toxicity is enantioselective. We chose to study freshly isolated brain mitochondria because of the role of mitochondrial dysfunction in neurodegenerative disorders. Whereas there was little effect related to HNE chirality, our data indicate that in the mitochondrial environment, the order of toxic potency under most conditions was 4-ONE>HNE. 4-ONE uncoupled mitochondrial respiration at a concentration of 5μM and inhibited aldehyde dehydrogenase 2 (ALDH2) activity with an IC(50) of approximately 0.5μM. The efficacy of altering mitochondrial endpoints was ALDH2 inhibition>respiration=mitochondrial swelling=ALDH5A inhibition>GSH depletion. Thiol-based alkenal scavengers, but not amine-based scavengers, were effective in blocking the effects of 4-ONE upon respiration. Quantum mechanical calculations provided insights into the basis for the elevated reactivity of 4-ONE>HNE. Our data demonstrate that 4-ONE is a potent effector of lipid peroxidation in the mitochondrial environment.


Comparison of the Chemical Profiles and Antioxidant Activities of Different Parts of Cultivated Cistanche deserticola Using Ultra Performance Liquid Chromatography-Quadrupole Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry and a 1,1-Diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl-Based Assay.

  • Xiaoming Wang‎ et al.
  • Molecules (Basel, Switzerland)‎
  • 2017‎

In this study, a sensitive ultra-performance liquid chromatography-photodiode array coupled to quadruple time-of-flight mass (UPLC-PDA-Q/TOF-MS) method and a 1,1-diphenyl-2- picrylhydrazyl (DPPH)-based assay were used to determine the chemical constituents and screen the antioxidant activity profiles of the methanol extracts of different parts of cultivated Cistanche deserticola (C. deserticola). First, qualitative and quantitative chemical composition analyses of the different parts of cultivated C. deserticola were conducted. Obvious differences were observed between the chemical profiles and content distribution of phenylethanoid glycosides (PhGs) from the different cultivated C. deserticola parts. The average contents of the six PhGs parts varied from 4.91 to 72.56 mg/g DW (milligrams of extract per gram of plant dry weight) in the six different parts of Cistanche deserticola, displaying a significant decreasing trend from the bottom to the top of cultivated C. deserticola and the highest content in the stems. From the bottom to the top of the plant, the echinacoside and cistanoside A content decreased and the 2 ' -acetylacteoside content increased. Second, an offline DPPH assay revealed that the total scavenging activities of all parts within the range of 20-500 μ g/mL increased in a concentration-dependent manner and that good antioxidant activities were found in all plant parts, particularly in the stems, which could be related to their higher PhG content. Additionally, a DPPH-UPLC-PDA method was successfully applied to rapidly screen the antioxidant profiles and antioxidant components of the different cultivated C. deserticola parts. According to the antioxidant profiles before and after the DPPH reaction, there were wide variations in the antioxidant activities of different cultivated C. deserticola parts. Moreover, the antioxidant profiles revealed the presence of major free radical scavengers identified as PhGs using UPLC-Q/TOF-MS. Finally, the established DPPH-UPLC-PDA method was reagent saving, rapid and feasible for correlating the chemical profile of traditional chinese medicines (TCMs) with their bioactivities without isolation and purification and may be used for multicomponent analysis of active substances in other foods and herbs. Therefore, to better harness C. deserticola resources, using this method to evaluate cultivated C. deserticola, a promising herb material with obvious antioxidant activity, is crucial.


The role of reperfusion injury in photodynamic therapy with 5-aminolaevulinic acid--a study on normal rat colon.

  • A Curnow‎ et al.
  • British journal of cancer‎
  • 2002‎

Reperfusion injury can occur when blood flow is restored after a transient period of ischaemia. The resulting cascade of reactive oxygen species damages tissue. This mechanism may contribute to the tissue damage produced by 5-aminolaevulinic acid-induced photodynamic therapy, if this treatment temporarily depletes oxygen in an area that is subsequently reoxygenated. This was investigated in the normal colon of female Wistar rats. All animals received 200 mg kg(-1) 5-aminolaevulinic acid intravenously 2 h prior to 25 J (100 mW) of 628 nm light, which was delivered continuously or fractionated (5 J/150 second dark interval/20 J). Animals were recovered following surgery, killed 3 days later and the photodynamic therapy lesion measured macroscopically. The effects of reperfusion injury were removed from the experiments either through the administration of free radical scavengers (superoxide dismutase (10 mg kg(-1)) and catalase (7.5 mg kg(-1)) in combination) or allopurinol (an inhibitor of xanthine oxidase (50 mg kg(-1))). Prior administration of the free radical scavengers and allopurinol abolished the macroscopic damage produced by 5-aminolaevulinic acid photodynamic therapy in this model, regardless of the light regime employed. As the specific inhibitor of xanthine oxidase (allopurinol) protected against photodynamic therapy damage, it is concluded that reperfusion injury is involved in the mechanism of photodynamic therapy in the rat colon.


Potent methyl oxidation of 5-methyl-2'-deoxycytidine by halogenated quinoid carcinogens and hydrogen peroxide via a metal-independent mechanism.

  • Jie Shao‎ et al.
  • Free radical biology & medicine‎
  • 2013‎

Halogenated quinones are a class of carcinogenic intermediates and are newly identified chlorination disinfection by-products in drinking water. We found recently that the highly reactive and biologically important hydroxyl radical ((•)OH) can be produced by halogenated quinones and H2O2 independent of transition metal ions. However, it is not clear whether these quinoid carcinogens and H2O2 can oxidize the nucleoside 5-methyl-2'-deoxycytidine (5mdC) to its methyl oxidation products and, if so, what the underlying molecular mechanism is. Here we show that three methyl oxidation products, 5-(hydroperoxymethyl)-, 5-(hydroxymethyl)-, and 5-formyl-2'-deoxycytidine, could be produced when 5mdC was treated with tetrachloro-1,4-benzoquinone (TCBQ) and H2O2. The formation of the oxidation products was markedly inhibited by typical (•)OH scavengers and under anaerobic conditions. Analogous effects were observed with other halogenated quinones and the classic Fenton system. Based on these data, we propose that the oxidation of 5mdC by TCBQ/H2O2 might be through the following mechanism: (•)OH produced by TCBQ/H2O2 may first abstract hydrogen from the methyl group of 5mdC, leading to the formation of 5-(2'-deoxycytidylyl)methyl radical, which may combine with O2 to form the peroxyl radical. The unstable peroxyl radical transforms into the corresponding hydroperoxide 5-(hydroperoxymethyl)-2'-deoxycytidine, which reacts with TCBQ and results in the formation of 5-(hydroxymethyl)-2'-deoxycytidine and 5-formyl-2'-deoxycytidine. This is the first report that halogenated quinoid carcinogens and H2O2 can induce potent methyl oxidation of 5mdC via a metal-independent mechanism, which may partly explain their potential carcinogenicity.


In vitro Antioxidant Potential in Sequential Extracts of Curcuma caesia Roxb. Rhizomes.

  • J Reenu‎ et al.
  • Indian journal of pharmaceutical sciences‎
  • 2015‎

Present study deals with antioxidant potential of sequential extracts of fresh and dried rhizomes of Curcuma caesia, using solvents viz., hexane, petroleum ether, benzene, chloroform, ethyl acetate, methanol and water, which was analyzed by 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl radical scavenging assay, total antioxidant capacity, ferric reducing activity and thiobarbituric acid reactive species assay. Total phenol content was estimated by the Folin-Ciocalteau method. C. caesia showed significant antioxidant activity in chloroform, benzene and ethyl acetate extracts. The chloroform extract was highly effective as free radical scavengers, electron-donating agents and reducing molybdate ions except for reducing lipid peroxidation. The highest total phenol content was also exhibited by chloroform and benzene extracts. Antioxidant potential expressed by C. caesia in the sequential extracts could be effectively utilized for identification of the bioactive compounds for future phytopharmacological applications.


Hypoxia rescues early mortality conferred by superoxide dismutase deficiency.

  • Shawna Wicks‎ et al.
  • Free radical biology & medicine‎
  • 2009‎

Oxidative stress is widely associated with disease and aging but the underlying mechanisms are incompletely understood. Here we show that the premature mortality of Drosophila deficient in superoxide scavengers, superoxide dismutase (SOD) 1 or SOD2, is rescued by chronic hypoxia. Strikingly, switching moribund SOD2-deficient adults from normoxia into hypoxia abruptly arrests their impending premature mortality and endows the survivors with a near-normal life span. This finding challenges the notion that irreversible oxidative damage initiated by unscavenged superoxide in the mitochondrial matrix underpins the premature mortality of SOD2-deficient adults. In contrast, switching moribund SOD1-deficient flies from normoxia into hypoxia fails to alter their mortality trajectory, suggesting that the deleterious effects of unscavenged superoxide in the cytoplasm/intermembrane space compartment are cumulative and largely irreversible. We conclude that cellular responses to superoxide-initiated oxidative stress are mediated through different compartment-specific pathways. Elucidating these pathways should provide novel insights into how aerobic cells manage oxidative stress in health, aging, and disease.


Antioxidant Properties of Kynurenines: Density Functional Theory Calculations.

  • Aleksandr V Zhuravlev‎ et al.
  • PLoS computational biology‎
  • 2016‎

Kynurenines, the main products of tryptophan catabolism, possess both prooxidant and anioxidant effects. Having multiple neuroactive properties, kynurenines are implicated in the development of neurological and cognitive disorders, such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, and Huntington's diseases. Autoxidation of 3-hydroxykynurenine (3HOK) and its derivatives, 3-hydroxyanthranilic acid (3HAA) and xanthommatin (XAN), leads to the hyperproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) which damage cell structures. At the same time, 3HOK and 3HAA have been shown to be powerful ROS scavengers. Their ability to quench free radicals is believed to result from the presence of the aromatic hydroxyl group which is able to easily abstract an electron and H-atom. In this study, the redox properties for kynurenines and several natural and synthetic antioxidants have been calculated at different levels of density functional theory in the gas phase and water solution. Hydroxyl bond dissociation enthalpy (BDE) and ionization potential (IP) for 3HOK and 3HAA appear to be lower than for xanthurenic acid (XAA), several phenolic antioxidants, and ascorbic acid. BDE and IP for the compounds with aromatic hydroxyl group are lower than for their precursors without hydroxyl group. The reaction rate for H donation to *O-atom of phenoxyl radical (Ph-O*) and methyl peroxy radical (Met-OO*) decreases in the following rankings: 3HOK ~ 3HAA > XAAOXO > XAAENOL. The enthalpy absolute value for Met-OO* addition to the aromatic ring of the antioxidant radical increases in the following rankings: 3HAA* < 3HOK* < XAAOXO* < XAAENOL*. Thus, the high free radical scavenging activity of 3HAA and 3HOK can be explained by the easiness of H-atom abstraction and transfer to O-atom of the free radical, rather than by Met-OO* addition to the kynurenine radical.


The reaction of hydrogen peroxide with hemoglobin induces extensive alpha-globin crosslinking and impairs the interaction of hemoglobin with endogenous scavenger pathways.

  • Florence Vallelian‎ et al.
  • Free radical biology & medicine‎
  • 2008‎

Cell-free hemoglobin (Hb) enhances the oxidation-related toxicity associated with inflammation, ischemia, and hemolytic disorders. Hb is highly vulnerable to oxidative damage, and irreversible structural changes involving iron/heme oxidation, heme-adduct products, and amino acid oxidation have been reported. Specific structural features of Hb, such as unconstrained alpha-chains and molecular size, determine the efficiency of interactions between the endogenous Hb scavengers haptoglobin (Hp) and CD163. Using HPLC, mass spectrometry, and Western blotting, we show that H(2)O(2)-mediated Hb oxidation results in the formation of covalently stabilized globin multimers, with prominent intramolecular crosslinking between alpha-globin chains. These structural alterations are associated with reduced Hp binding, reduced CD163 interaction, and severely impaired endocytosis of oxidized Hb by the Hp-CD163 pathway. As a result, when exposed to oxidized Hb, CD163-positive HEK293 cells and human macrophages do not increase hemeoxygenase-1 (HO-1) expression, the physiological anti-oxidative macrophage response to Hb exposure. Failed Hb clearance, inadequate HO-1 expression, and the subsequent accumulation of oxidatively damaged Hb species might thus contribute to pathologies related to oxidative stress.


Products of the phospholipase A(2) pathway mediate the dihydrorhodamine fluorescence response evoked by endogenous and exogenous peroxynitrite in PC12 cells.

  • L Palomba‎ et al.
  • Free radical biology & medicine‎
  • 2000‎

A short-term exposure of PC12 cells to tert-butylhydroperoxide promotes a rapid oxidation of dihydrorhodamine sensitive to nitric oxide synthase inhibitors and peroxynitrite scavengers. This response was not directly caused by peroxynitrite, but rather appeared to be mediated by peroxynitrite-dependent activation of phospholipase A(2). The following lines of evidence support this inference: (i) the peroxynitrite-dependent dihydrorhodamine fluorescence response was blunted by low concentrations of two structurally unrelated phospholipase A(2) inhibitors; (ii) under similar conditions, the phospholipase A(2) inhibitors prevented release of arachidonic acid; (iii) low levels of arachidonic acid restored the dihydrorhodamine fluorescence response in nitric oxide synthase- as well as phospholipase A(2)-inhibited cells; (iv) the dihydrorhodamine fluorescence response induced by authentic peroxynitrite was also blunted by phospholipase A(2) inhibitors and restored upon addition of reagent arachidonic acid. We conclude that endogenous, or exogenous, peroxynitrite does not directly oxidize dihydrorhodamine in intact cells. Rather, peroxynitrite appears to act as a signalling molecule promoting release of arachidonic acid, which in turn leads to formation of species causing the dihydrorhodamine fluorescence response.


Isolation and characterization of bioactive components from Mirabilis jalapa L. radix.

  • Jyotchna Gogoi‎ et al.
  • Journal of traditional and complementary medicine‎
  • 2016‎

The present investigation was carried out to isolate and characterize bioactive components from Mirabilis jalapa L. radix ( zǐ mò lì gēn). Thin-layer chromatography was used for the separation of spots from fractions of the crude extract. Separated spots were collected for identification of their activities. Free-radical scavenging activity was evaluated by spraying thin-layer chromatography plates (spotted with fractions) with 0.2% of 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl solution. Activity against human pathogens such as Staphylococcus aureus and Candida albicans were determined using the agar diffusion method. Potential spots were subjected to infrared (IR) analysis and gas chromatography for characterization. Two spots (5F1 and 1F3) showed free-radical scavenging activity. The 1F3 spot was active against both S. aureus and C. albicans, whereas the 5F1 spot was active against S. aureus only. IR spectral analysis indicated that 5F1 spot to be a triterpenoid. Using IR spectral analysis and an IR library search, the 1F3 spot was identified to be a flavone, which may have a hydroxyl group in ring "A" of the flavone nucleus. Our results indicated that the 1F3 and 5F1 spots are potential free-radical scavengers. Both 1F3 and 5F1 exhibited antimicrobial activity. IR spectral analysis coupled with an IR library search indicated 1F3 and 5F1 to be a flavone and a triterpenoid, respectively.


Internalization and induction of antioxidant messages by microvesicles contribute to the antiapoptotic effects on human endothelial cells.

  • Raffaella Soleti‎ et al.
  • Free radical biology & medicine‎
  • 2012‎

Microvesicles are plasma membrane-derived fragments released from various cell types during activation and/or apoptosis and posses the ability to deliver biological information between cells. Microvesicles generated from T lymphocytes undergoing activation and apoptosis bear the morphogen Sonic Hedgehog, and exert a beneficial potential effect on the cardiovascular system through their dual capacity to increase nitric oxide and reduce reactive oxygen species production. This study investigated the effect of microvesicles on the apoptosis of human umbilical vein endothelial cells triggered by actinomycin D. Microvesicles prevented apoptosis induced by actinomycin D by modulating reactive oxygen species production: during the early phase of apoptosis, microvesicles might act directly as reactive oxygen species scavengers, owing to their ability to carry active antioxidant enzymes, catalase, and isoforms of the superoxide dismutase. Furthermore, their effects were associated with the ability to increase the expression of manganese-superoxide dismutase in endothelial cells, through the internalization process. Interestingly, microvesicles bearing Sonic Hedgehog induced cytoprotection in endothelial cells through the activation of the Sonic Hedgehog pathway. These findings provide additional evidence that microvesicles from T lymphocytes exert their vasculoprotective effects by promoting internalization and induction of antioxidant messages to the endothelial monolayer.


Scavenging of hydroxyl radicals but not of peroxynitrite by inhibitors and substrates of nitric oxide synthases.

  • A Rehman‎ et al.
  • British journal of pharmacology‎
  • 1997‎

1. The nitric oxide synthase inhibitor NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) is widely used to study the role of NO. in physiological and pathological processes, including its role in the generation of the cytotoxic species peroxynitrite (ONOO-) and of reactive oxygen radicals such as hydroxyl (OH.). Often L-NAME is applied to tissues at mM concentrations. At such high concentrations, it might act as a free radical scavenger. A similar possibility might apply to the use of high levels of arginine to study the role of NO. in atherogenesis. 2. We therefore examined the rate of scavenging of OH. by L-NAME and found that L-NAME reacts more quickly with OH. than the established 'OH. scavenger' mannitol and the widely used 'OH. trap' salicylate. However, D-NAME can scavenge OH. at rates equal to L-NAME. Both L- and D-arginine were also good OH. scavengers, comparable in effectiveness to mannitol. 3. Neither L-NAME, D-NAME, L-arginine nor D-arginine was able to inhibit ONOO(-)-dependent nitration of tyrosine, suggesting that they are unlikely to be scavengers of ONOO(-)-derived nitrating species. 4. Neither L-NAME, D-NAME, L-arginine nor D-arginine was able to inhibit the inactivation of alpha 1-antiproteinase by ONOO-, suggesting that they cannot prevent direct oxidations by peroxynitrite. 5. We conclude that L-NAME has sufficient activity as an OH. scavenger to confound certain pharmacological experiments. However, this explanation of its biological effects can be ruled out if control experiments show that D-NAME has no effect and that L-arginine (also a free radical scavenger) antagonizes the action of L-NAME.


Tumor growth inhibition by sonodynamic therapy using a novel sonosensitizer.

  • Hirofumi Tsuru‎ et al.
  • Free radical biology & medicine‎
  • 2012‎

Sonodynamic therapy (SDT) with low-intensity ultrasound combined with a sonosensitizer may be a promising approach to cancer therapy. Use of ultrasound has the advantage of being noninvasive, with deep-penetration properties, and convenient because of the low or no sensitivity of sonosensitizers to light. In this study, SDT with a novel sonosensitizer (a porphyrin derivative) was evaluated in vitro and in vivo. Ultrasound irradiation with a sonosensitizer elicited potent sonotoxicity in vitro without the danger of phototoxicity. The sonotoxic effect was mediated by reactive oxygen species (ROS) and was reduced by ROS scavengers. Cell membrane lipid peroxidation increased significantly just after ultrasound irradiation with a sonosensitizer, but there was no increase in apoptosis. In an in vivo mouse xenograft model, SDT with a sonosensitizer markedly inhibited tumor cell growth. The skin hypersensitivity after light exposure was not observed in a sonosensitizer-treatment group, consistent with the in vitro findings. These results suggest that ROS generated by SDT with a sensitizer can damage tumor cells, resulting in necrosis and prevention of tumor growth. This noninvasive treatment with no adverse effects such as skin sensitivity is therefore promising for therapy of cancers located deep within patients.


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