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The beginnings. 1775 - Priestley: discovery of O2 observation of toxic effect of O2 1900 - Gomberg: discovery of triphenylmethyl radical Until 1950/60: minimal attention was given to biological actions of free radicals and reactive oxygen species.
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1. Pathophysiology and Pharmacology of Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) V. Bauer, Š. Mátyás, S. Štolc, R. Sotníková,
V. Nosálová
2. The beginnings
3. Evidence on the existence of ROS
4. Free radicals have one or more unpaired electrons in their outer orbital, indicated in formulas as [?]. As a consequence they have an increased reactivity with other molecules. This reactivity is determined by the ease with which a species can accept or donate electrons.
The prevalence of oxygen in biological systems means that oxygen centered radicals are the most common type found.
O2 acts in a process that is central to metabolism in aerobic life, as a terminal electron acceptor, being reduced to water. Transfer of electron to oxygen yields the reactive intermediates.
5. The term reactive oxygen species (ROS) rather than oxygen radicals is now generally preferred because singlet oxygen (its one form), hydrogen peroxide, hypochlorous acid, peroxide, hydroperoxide and epoxide metabolites of endogenous lipids and xenobiotics have chemically reactive oxygen containing functional groups, but are not radicals and do not necessarily interact with biological tissues via radical reactions.
Molecular oxygen is a biradical, having two unpaired electrons of parallel spin. As it is a terminal electron acceptor being reduced to water, oxygen acts in processes that are central to metabolism in aerobic life.
7. Half-life of some reactive species
8. ROS present in mammalian tissues have both endogenous and exogenous origin. Their production is essential to normal function or metabolism of most mammalian cells.
Approximately, 90% of all oxygen consumed by mammalian cells is catalytically reduced by four electrons to yield two molecules of water. It is now clear that oxygen may also be reduced by less than four electrons in enzymatic and nonenzymatic reactions.
ROS are, however, also destructive unless tightly controlled. Mammalian cells have developed a battery of defenses to prevent and repair the injuries caused by oxidative stress.
9. Origin of ROS H+
.NO OONO- HOONO
NO2.
e- e- e- e-
O2 O2.- H2O2 .OH H2O
O2.- O2 Fe2+ Fe3+ H+
Cl-
Myelo-
peroxidase
H2O
HOCl 1O2 + Cl-
H2O2 H2O
Sources
endogenous exogenous
prostaglandin synth. radiation, ultrasound
respiratory chain cigarette smoke
autooxidation drugs
FREE RADICAL S
phagocytes heat
oxyhemoglobin pesticides
oxidative enzymes infections
accumul reduced.metab. hyperoxia, exercise
air pollution (NOx, O3)
10. Enzymatic sources of ROS Xanthine oxidase
Hypoxanthine + 2O2 ® Xanthine + O2.- + H2O2
NADPH oxidase
NADPH + O2 ® NADP+ + O2.-
Amine oxidases
R-CH2-NH2 + H2O + O2 ® R-CHO + NH3 + H2O2
Myeloperoxidase
Hypohalous acid formation
H2O2 + X- + H+ ® HOX + H2O
NADH oxidase reaction
Hb(Mb)-Fe3+ + ROOH ® Compound I + ROH
Compound I + NADPH ® NAD· + Compound II
Compound II + NADH ® NAD· + E-Fe3+
NAD· + O2 ® NAD+ + O2.-
Aldehyde oxidase
2R-CHO + 2O2 ® 2R-COOH + O2.-
Dihydroorotate dehydrogenase
Dihydroorotate + NAD· + O2 ® NADH + O2.- + Orotic acid
12. Nonenzymatic sources of ROS and autooxidation reactions Fe2+ + O2 ® Fe3++ O2.-
Hb(Mb)-Fe2+ + O2 ® Hb(Mb)-Fe3++ O2.-
Catecholamines + O2 ® Melanin + O2.-
Reduced flavin
Leukoflavin + O2 ® Flavin semiquinone + O2.-
Coenzyme
Q-hydroquinone + O2 ® Coenzyme Q (ubiquinone) + O2 .-
Tetrahydropterin + 2 O2 ® Dihydropterin + 2 O2.-
13. Until the 1960s, free radicals were not considered particularly relevant for mammalian physiology and pathology.
The discoveries of the existence of superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity in mammalian cells in 1969 by McCord and Fridovich and association of bactericidal activity of neutrophils with production of the superoxide radical (O2.-) by Babior and coworkers in 1973, linked free radicals to numerous physiological and pathophysiological processes.
One decade later, in 1981, Granger and coworkers established a hypothesis on the role of these reactive species in the reperfusion injury after intestinal ischemia.
14. ROS are tightly controlled resulting in a physiological balance between their production and elimination
15. Biological antioxidant defense mechanisms
16. Under pathological condition the physiological balance is lost
17. Disbalance between production and elimination of ROS develops during inflammation, ischemia/reperfusion, altered metabolism, action of drugs, pollutants, etc.
Such disbalance causes pathology of brain, heart, vessels, gut, airways, muscle, parenchy- matous organs (liver, kidney, pancreas), eye, skin, joints, etc.
Exposure of the tissues to ROS in a variety of biological systems has documented their ability to damage lipids, proteins and DNA. The resulting damage potentiated by increased free intracellular Ca2+ causes activation/deacti-vation of various enzyme systems and cell injury or death.
18. Mechanisms of ROS induced cell injury
Lipid Oxidation of thiols DNA damage Schiff bases
peroxidation Carbonyl formation
Damage to Ca2+ and Poly ADP Altered gene
other ion transport ribosylation expression
systems
Amadori products
Membrane Instability to maintain Depletion of ATP
damage normal ion gradients and NAD(P)(H)
Activation/Deactivation of AGEs
various enzyme systems (Advanced glycation
end products)
Cell injury
19. Involvement of ROS in APOPTOSIS NOXA
(trauma, hypoxia under homeostatic
metabolic insufficiency control to a certain
activation of excitatory receptors) limit
Ion disbalance
caspase/calpaine
ROS generation Mitochondrial failure activation
Bcl-2 / Bax disbalance
CELL DEATH (necrosis / apoptosis)
20. Currently it is believed that free radicals are definitely paticipating in several health disorders.
There are different pathologic conditions where extracellular, intracellular or both ROS act at least in part.
However, in spite of the extensive studies our knowledge concerning the role and action of free radicals and ROS is still incomplete and changing.
21. Pathological conditions that may have a free radical component and sites of ROS actions
22. ROS generation during ischemia and reperfusion
23. ROS in the sequence of events in STROKE HYPOXIA
ATP depletion
Cell depolarization
(? Mg block of NMDA rec.)
Excitatory aminoacid release
Ca2+ influx into the cells Slow accumul. Ca2+ in mitochondria
Activation of phosholipases, MPT pore opening in mitochondria
proteinkinases, proteases, H+ gradient collapse in mitochondria
endonucl., phosphatases etc.
ROS generation
ONOO- generation
Devastatory effect in cells
NEURONAL DEATH
Therapeutic interventions: cyklosporine (specific MPT pore inhibitor),
antioxidants (lazaroids, deferoxamine, SOD in liposomes, allopurinol)
24. Frequent targets of ROS
25. ROS affect different tissues and tissue components.
They affect e.g. not only the smooth muscle cells, but also their epithelium, endothelium, innervation, membrane lipids, receptors, transmitter systems, prostanoid production, Ca2+ homeo- stasis, etc.)
26. Effects of H2O2 on guinea pig ileum
29. ?NO reacting with O2?- gives rise to unstable peroxynitrite, which decom-poses also to the most toxic ?OH.
Because of the large energy gain of the reduction of ?OH to H2O, this radical reacts instantaneously with any biological molecule in its immediate environment by abstracting hydrogen atom.
30. Production of ROS in endothelium and neutrophils
31. Elimination by SOD with CAT of the effects of FMLP activated neutrophils (NEUT) generating O2 ?- on noradrenaline (NA) precontracted rat aorta
32. Effects of ROS on the endothelium and development of atherosclerosis atherosclerotic lesion cell proliferation release of growth factor
active oxygen,
recruitment of collagenase, elastase, adherence
macrophages lipases, proteases of platelets
Plasma endothelial cells
LDL
Intima activated
oxygen
Fatty Streak iron/copper
Oxidatively modified LDL
apoB-bound 4-hydoxynonenal, oxidized lipids,
fatty acid hydroperoxides
33. Diseases that may have ROS related pathogenesisI Airways
Normobaric hyperoxic injury
Bronchopulmonary dysplasia
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
Respiratory distress syndromes (ARDS, IRDS)
Emphysema
Chronic bronchitis & asthma bronchiale
Asbestosis
Inhaled pollutants, smoke, chemicals (e.g. paraquat, bleomycin) & oxidants (e.g. SO2, NOx, O3)
Gut
Ischemia/reperfusion
Crohn’s disease
Ulcerative colitis & necrotizing enterocolitis
Gastric & intestinal ulcers
Chemicals (e.g. NSAID)
34. II Heart and vessels
Ischemia/reperfusion (after infarction, transplantation)
Chemicals (e.g. ethanol, doxorubicin)
Atherosclerosis/hypertension
Selenium deficiency
Vasculitis
Brain and nerves
Hyperbaric hyperoxic injury
Parkinson's disease
Alzheimer’s disease (details see in the next panel)
Amyotrophic lateral scleroses
Neuropathies (e.g. diabetic)
Neurotoxins (e.g. 6-hydroxydopamine, MPTP)
Vitamin E deficiency
Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses
Traumatic injury/hemorrhage/inflammation
Ischemia/reperfusion
HIV-dementia
Multiple sclerosis
35. ALZHEIMER DISEASE and oxidative stress ? Protein oxidation (carbonyls) - „crosslinking“
? Fe in neurons with fibrilary aggregates (?-hyperphosphoryl.protein)
? Content of aluminium in neurons with fibrilllary aggregates
?-amyloid generation (direct cytotoxic action,? Cai, generation of ROS
even in the absence of Me2+)
? Activity of microglia (brain macrophages = ROS source)
? Activity of CAT without ? SOD activity resulting in ? H2O2 and ??OH
Generation of lipid hydroperoxides and reactive cytotoxic aldehydes
(e.g. HNE)
Therapeutic interventions: antioxidants and ROS scavengers
(e.g. U-74500A, U-78517F, U-83836E, vitamines E,C),
chelators, CAT, deprenyl
36. III Blood
Chemicals (e.g. phenylhydrazine, primaquine, sulphonamides,
lead)
Protoporphyrine photooxidation
Malaria
Anemias (sickle cell, favism)
Liver
Ischemia/reperfusion
Chemicals (e.g. halogenated hydrocarbons, quinones, ethanol,
acetaminophen)
Accumulation of iron or copper
Endotoxin
Kidney
Autoimmune nephrosis (inflammation, e.g.
glomerulonephritis)
Chemicals (e.g. aminoglycosides, heavy metals)
37. IV Pancreas
Acute & chronic pancreatitis
Diabetes mellitus
Eye
Retinopathy of prematurity
Photic retinopathy
Cataracts
Laser photoablation
Skin
Radiation (solar, ionising)
Thermal injury
Chemicals (photosensitizers, e.g. tetracyclines)
Contact dermatitis
Porphyria
38. V Muscle
Muscular dystrophy
Multiple sclerosis
Exercise
Others
Aging
Pregnancy and newborn complications
Radiation injury
Cancer
Chemicals (e.g. alloxan, iron overload, radiosensitizers)
Autoimmune diseases (e.g. rheumatoid arthritis, lupus erythematodes)
Inflammation (in general)
39. Potential antioxidant therapy I Inhibitors of ROS synthesis
NADPH-oxidase Inhibitors
Flavoprotein inhibitors
(FAD analogs, antibodies of cytP450 reductase)
Agents forming complexes with Fe2+ in cyt b
(butylisocyanide, imidazole, pyridine)
Mg2+(enabling FAD binding),Fe2+ ,Cu2+ chelators
(bathophenantroline, EDTA, EGTA, deferoxamine,
bilirubin)
Thiol reagents (N-ethylmaleimide, 1-naphtol, 1,4-
naphtoquinone)
NADPH analogs (NADPH 2,3-dialdehyde)
Inhibitors of metabolism of AA and PLA2
IMAO (Deprenyl)
Others (corticosteroids, diphenyliodonium)
Inhibitors of xanthine oxidase (tungsten, oxypurinol,
allopurinol, pterinaldehyde, folic acid)
Antibodies against leukocytes
40. II Agents supporting and complementing enzymatic
protective systems
Superoxide dismutase (SOD)
SOD (Lip-SOD,PEG-SOD)
Copper diisopropylsalicylate
SOD mimetics
Catalase (Cat)
Cat (Lip-CatTP, Peg-CatTP)
Glutathionperoxidase (GTPx)
GSH, GSH methylester, GSH diethylmaleate
Low m.w. thiols (e.g. cystein)
High m.w. thiols (e.g. albumin)
L-2-oxothiazidolidine-4-carboxylate
N-acetylcysteine
Ebselen
Selenium
Lactoperoxidase & DT-diaphorase
41. III Drugs interfering with iron and copper metabolism
(deferoxamine, hemopexine, ferritin, transferrin, lactoferrin,
ceruloplasmin, serum albumin)
Antioxidants
Vitamins and their analogues (vitamin E, vitamin C, carotenoids,
oxycarotenoids)
Phenol derivatives (eugenol, guajacol, probucol, N,N-diphenyl-
phenylendiamine)
Flavone derivatives (flavonoids, isoflavonoids, allirazine, green tea)
Indol derivatives (stobadine, carvedilol, melatonin, ?-carbolines)
Xanthine derivatives (allopurinol, oxypurinol, uric acid)
21-amino steroids (lazaroids)
Antiinflammatory drugs (piroxicam, flufenamic acid, mefenamic
acid, hydroquinone, sulindac, fenylbutazone, indomethacin,
ibuprofen, naproxen, levamisole, sulfasalazine, acetylsalicylic
acid)
Hypolipidemics (lovastatin)
Proteins (albumin)
42. IV Agents containing sulfur (cysteine, cysteamine, GSH,
dithiothreitol, N-acetylcysteine, ACE inhibitors,
dimethylthiourea, thiourea, thiomalate, hypotaurine, taurine,
penicillamine, 2-amino-2-thiazole, dihydrolipoate,
a-mercaptopropionyl glycine, N-2-mercaptopropionyl glycine,
b-mercaptoethanole, D,L-methionine, other low and high m.w.
thiols)
Nitroso compounds ( .NO, nitrosopine)
Other drugs (b-adrenolytics, H2-antihistaminics, calcium channel
blockers, pentoxyphylline, carbanilates, urea, bilirubin, glucans,
manitol, glucose, 2-methylaminochromans, DMSO, BHT, BHA,
2-MEA, etoxiquin, a-lipoic acid, Zn2+)
43. V Inhibition of O2.- formation
Nonsteroid antiflogistics
Antiasthmatics
(b-adrenomimetics, corticoids, methylxanthines)
Prostaglandins
Flavonoids
Antibiotics
(e.g. minocycline)
Antimalarics
Inhibitors of ACE
Dipyridamol
44. VI/a Scavenging or removal of ROS
Scavenging of generated O2.-
Flavonoids & other natural products Vitamins E, C, A(?-carotene)
Synthetic analogs of PGB2
Dipyridamol
Pentoxiphylline
Antibiotics
.NO donors
5-acetylsalicylic acid
Uric acid
Scavenging HOCl
Uric acid
Taurine, hypotaurine
Scavenging or quenching of 1O2
Silymarine
?-carotene
Vitamin E
Stobadine
45. VI/b Scavenging or removal of ROS
Removal of H2O2
Catalase (not working in the presence of .NO)
N-acetylcysteine
Elimination of OH.
Manitol
Thiourea
Stobadine
Melatonin
Probucol
5-acetylsalicylic acid
Lazaroids
DMSO, DMTU, BHT
Uric acid
Glucose
46. VI/c Scavenging or removal of ROS
Lipid oxidation chain breaking antioxidants (anti LO. and LOO.)
Bilirubin
Vitamins E
Vitamin C
?-carotenoids and oxycarotenoids
Stobadine
Melatonin
?-lipoic acid
Uric acid
Lazaroids
BHT, BHA
Ehoxyquin
2-methylaminochroman
47. Protection by STOBADINE (STB) of the acetylcholine induced relaxation in rat aortic rings caused by reversible occlusion of aorta in vivo (I/R)
48. STOBADINE (STB) effect on experimetal myocardial infarction (MI) in dogs 3hr occlusion of the anterior descendent branch of the left coronary artery
Stobadine (1 mg/kg iv) given 30 min after the occlusion
Reduction of the infarction area by 28% (? P < 0.05)
49. STOBADINE effect on transmission in rat hippocampal slices during hypoxia/reoxygenation
52. Therapeutic relevance of the use of antioxidantsI
53. II
54. ROS in the sequence of events in NEUROTRAUMA TRAUMA
Excitatory aminoacid release (GLU)
Ca2+ influx into the cells Activ. of inflam. cascade
Protease/lipase activation (PAF, eikosanoids,
Cell depolarization cytokines, PMN activ.)
(? Mg block of NMDA rec.) ROS generation
Na+influx cell devastation
Edema NEURONAL DEATH
TRIAD : EXCITOTOXICITY, Ca-OVERLOAD, OXIDATIVE STRESS
Therapeutic interventions: -SH donors (N-acetylcysteine), lazaroids, steroids, deferoxamine, SOD, vitamines A,E,C, pyridoindoles, stobadine, PBN, flavonoids (quercetine), PAF antag. (BN 520210)
55. III
56. IV
57. Antianginal effect of STOBADINE (STB) Phase II clinical study Patients with angina pectoris (stable and effort) (n = 13)
Effect of 4 week treatment with STOBADINE (up to 100 mg/day p.o.)
Significant decrease in the No. of anginal attacks
Significant (* P<0.05) decrease in the No. of selfadministered nitroglycerine tablets
58. Conclusions IROS act by:
59. Conclusions IIThe effects of ROS could be prevented or stopped by:
60. Conclusions IIITherapeutic success with the use of antioxidants, quenchers and scavengers