1.63k likes | 1.92k Views
老化與抗氧化能力 及其相關分子檢測. Dr. 曾婉芳. Oxidative stress. Oxidative Stress. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) ROS and oxidative stress Antioxidant system Oxidative damage Oxidative stress and apoptosis Oxidative stress and aging Oxidative stress and cancer ROS as signaling molecules.
E N D
老化與抗氧化能力及其相關分子檢測 Dr.曾婉芳
Oxidative Stress • Reactive oxygen species (ROS) • ROS and oxidative stress • Antioxidant system • Oxidative damage • Oxidative stress and apoptosis • Oxidative stress and aging • Oxidative stress and cancer • ROS as signaling molecules
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) • ROS • OH. (hyroxyl radical) • O2-. (superoxide radical) • H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide) • NO. (nitric oxide) • Oxidative stress • Oxidative damage
Toxic effects of ROS • Protein oxidation • Lipid peroxidation • Nucleic acids damage • Double-strand DNA breaks • Single-strand DNA breaks • Change DNA bases • 8-oxoguanine • Thymine glycol
Lipid peroxidation • Measure the malondialdehyde formed • Lipid peroxidation is a chain reaction. • Each fatty acyl moiety that undergoes peroxidaion generate a radical that can initiate another peroxidation reaction.
Intracellular sources of free radicals • Mitochondrial electron transport system • Superoxide radical and semiquinone radical • Microsomal (ER) electron transport system • Superoxide radical and H2O2 • Arachidonic acid metabolism • Reactions within peroxisome • Superoxide radical and H2O2
Intracellular sources of free radicals • In cytosol • Xanthine oxidase oxidizes xanthine and generates H2O2 • Amino acid oxidases generates H2O2 as their ordinary products
H2O2 and O2-. may diffuse from their subcellular sites of production and affect the whole cell • H2O2 can cross biological membranes
Reactive nitrogen species (RSN) • Inactivation of respiratory chain complexes; inhibition of protein and DNA synthesis • RNS are reduced or inactivated through the generation of a disulfur bond between two glutathione molecules to form oxidized glutathione
Dietary oxidants • Generation of ROS • ROS are reduced or inactivated through the generation of a disulfur bond between two glutathione molecules to form oxidized glutathione
Xenobiotics • Man-made compounds with chemical structures foreign to a given organism • Induce cancer • Glutathione is involved in the conjugation of epoxides to less toxic compounds that will be eventually excreted
Antioxidative system • Antioxidant • Glutathione, GSH • Vitamin C, E • Cysteine • Protein-thiol • Cerutoplasmin: important in reducing Fe3+ release from ferritin • Antioxidative enzyme
Antioxidative enzyme • Catalase • Superoxide dismutase • Glutathione peroxidase • Glutathione reductase • Gluththione S-transferase • Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase • DT-diaphorase
Catalase (EC 1.11.1.6) • 2H2O2 2H2O+O2 catalase • A homotetrameric haeminenzyme, 240 kD • Subunit 60 kD • Four ferriprotoporphyrin groups • One of the most efficient enzymes known • It is so efficient that it cannot be saturate by H2O2 at any concentration
Superoxide dismutase (SOD. EC 1.15.1.1) • Human SOD • Cytosolic CuZn-SOD • Mitochondrial SOD: MnSOD • Extracellular SOD • 2O2-.+ 2H+H2O2 + O2 superoxide dismutase
Manganese SOD (MnSOD) • A homotetramer (96 kDa) containing one manganese atom per subunit • Cycles from Mn(III)–Mn(II) and back to Mn(III) during the dismutation of superoxide
Cytosolic CuZn-SOD • Two identical subunits of about 32 kDa • Each containing a metal cluster, the active site, constituted by a copper and a zinc atom bridged by a common ligand: His 61 • Inactivation of copper- and zinc-containing SOD by H2O2 is the consequence of several sequential reactions
Inactivation of cytosolic CuZn-SOD by H2O2 • Reduction of the active site Cu(II) to Cu(I) by H2O2 • Oxidation of the Cu(I) by a second H2O2, thus generating a powerful oxidant, which may be Cu(I)O, Cu(II)OH or Cu(III) • Oxidation of the histidine, causing loss of SOD activity
Extracellular superoxide dismutase (EC-SOD) • A secretory, tetrameric, copper and zinc containig glycoprotein • High affinity for certain glycosaminogycans such as heparin and heparan sulfate • In the intersticial spaces of tissues • In extracellular fluids, accounting for the majority of the SOD activity of plasma, lymph, and synovial fluid
EC-SOD • Not induced by its substrate or other oxidants (xanthine oxidase plus hypoxanthine, paraquat, pyrogallol, a-naphthoflavone, hydroquinone, catechol, Fe2+, Cu2+, buthionine sulphoximine, diethylmaleate, t-butyl hydroperoxide, cumene hydroperoxide, selenite, citiolone and high oxygen partial pressure) • Its regulation in mammalian tissues primarily occurs in a manner coordinated by cytokines, rather than as a response of individual cells to oxidants
Nickel superoxide dismutase(Ni-SOD) • Purified from the cytosolic fraction of Streptomyces sp. and Streptomyces coelicolor • Four identical subunits of 13.4 kDa, stable at pH 4.0–8.0, and up to 70°C
Glutathione peroxidase(GP, EC 1.11.1.19) glutathione peroxidase ROOH ROH+H2O 2GSH GSSG
Glutathione peroxidase (GP) • GP contains covalently bound Se (selenium) in the form of selenocysteine
GPX isoenzymes • Cytosolic GPX (cGPX) • Mitochondrial GPX (GPX1) • found in most tissues • Predominantly present in erythrocytes, kidney, and liver • Phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase GPX4 (PHGPX) • Cytosolic GPX2 (GPX-G1) • Extracellular GPX3 (or GPX-P) • GPX5 • Expressed specifically in mouse epididymis, Selenium-independent
GPX • cGPX and GPX1 reduce fatty acid hydroperoxides and H2O2 at the expense of GSH • Cytosolic GPX2 (GPX-G1) and extracellular GPX3 (GPX-P) are poorly detected in most tissues except for the gastrointestinal tract and kidney, respectively.
GPX1 • 80 kD, contains one selenocysteine (Sec) residue in each of the four identical subunits, which is essential for enzyme activity • The principal antioxidant enzyme for the detoxification of H2O2 has for a long time been considered to be GPX, as catalase has much lower affinity for H2O2 than GPX
PHGPX • Found in most tissues • Highly expressed in renal epithelial cells and testes • Located in both the cytosol and the membrane fraction • Directly reduce the phospholipid hydroperoxides, fatty acid hydroperoxides, and cholesterol hydroperoxides that are produced in peroxidized membranes and oxidized lipoproteins
Tissue-specific functions of individual glutathione peroxidases • All glutathione peroxidases reduce hydrogen peroxide and alkyl hydroperoxides at expense of GSH • Four glutathione peroxidases isozymes 1.Classical glutathione peroxidase (cGPx) 2. Gastrointestinal glutathione peroxidases (GI-GPx) 3.Plasma GPx (pGPx) 4. Phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidases (PHGPx)
Classical glutathione peroxidase (cGPx) • Ubiquitously distributed • Reduces only soluble hydroperoxides, such as H2O2, and some organic hydroperoxides, such as hydroperoxyl fatty acids, cumene hydroperoxide, or t-butyl hydroperoxide
Gastrointestinal glutathione peroxidases(GI-GPx) • Expressed in gastrointestinal tract • Provides a barrier against hydroperoxides derived from the diet or from metabolism of ingested xenobiotics • Substrate specificity is similar to that of cGPx
Plasma GPx (pGPx) • Expressed in tissues in contact with body fluids, e.g., kidney, ciliary body, and maternal/fetal interfaces
Phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidases (PHGPx) • Protects membrane lipids • Reduces hydroperoxides of more complex lipids like phosphatidylcholine hydroperoxide • Reduces hydroperoxo groups of thymine, lipoproteins, and cholesterol esters • Unique in acting on hydroperoxides integrated in membranes • Silence lipoxygenases • Becomes an inactive structural component of the mitochondrial capsule during sperm maturation
Glutathione reductase (GR) glutathione reductase GSSG+H+ 2GSH NADPH NADP+
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, Mg2+ Glucose-6-phosphate 6-phosphoglucono-δ-lactone NADP+NADPH
DT-diaphorase • NAD(P)H:(quinone acceptor) oxidoreductase (EC 1.6. 99.2) • In cytosol • Two electron transfer of quinone compounds Quinone Hydroquinone
Glutathione S-transferase (GST) • Detoxification of toxic compounds (RX) to increase the solubility of the compound • The less toxic derivative of the original compound can then be excreted in the urine
Heme oxygenase • Heme biliverdin bilirubin • A major stress protein induced in cells response to oxidant stress • Bilirubin is an efficient plasma or serum scavenger of singlet 1O2, O2-., and peroxy radicals
Oxidants as stimulators of signal transduction • Oxidants • Superoxide • Hydrogen peroxide • Hydroxyl radicals • Lipid hydroperoxides
ROS act as second messengers • Ligand-receptor interactions produce ROS and that antioxidants block receptor-mediated signal transduction led to a proposal that ROS may be second messengers
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) as second messengers • Generation of ROS by cytokines Ligand ROS Tumor necrosis factor- H2O2/HO Interleukin 1 H2O2/O2- Transforming growth Factor-1 H2O2 Platelet derived growth factor H2O2 Insulin H2O2 Angiotension II H2O2/O2- Vitamin D3 O2- Parathyroid hormone O2-