Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.6.3.1 (NADPH oxidase)
11,281 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Derangements of the three endothelium-related vasodilator systems (prostaglandins, endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor(s) and nitric oxide) cause the endothelial dysfunction observed in hypertension. Free radical-induced nitric oxide degradation plays a crucial role in hypertension. An increase in superoxide producing enzymes such as NAD(P)H oxidase and xanthine oxidase has been demonstrated. Superoxide dismutase may correct endothelial dysfunction in vitro and superoxide dismutase mimetics can lower blood pressure in experimental animals. Antioxidant agents and xanthine oxidase-inhibiting compounds have been used in humans. In addition, the synthesis of vasoconstrictor peroxides derived from the activity of cyclooxygenase in the endothelium and the vascular smooth muscle is stimulated by the OH. radical. Hydrogen peroxide levels are augmented in hypertension, but its role is unclear because recent investigations have shown that this substance may act as a hyperpolarizing factor. It is thought that the therapeutic benefit of anti-hypertensive drugs, such as calcium antagonists and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, could be in part due to an inhibition of free radical production. A role of superoxide in the endothelial dysfunction and hypertension of chronic renal failure has also been suggested by recent animal experiments.
Nephrol Dial Transplant 2002 Feb
PMID:Oxygen species in the microvascular environment: regulation of vascular tone and the development of hypertension. 1181 69

Adaptation to hypoxia is a topic of considerable clinical relevance, as it influences the pathophysiology of anaemia, polycythaemia, tissue ischaemia and cancer. A growing number of physiologically relevant genes are regulated in response to changes in intracellular oxygen tension. These include genes encoding erythropoietin, vascular endothelial growth factor and tyrosine hydroxylase. Studies on the regulation of the erythropoietin gene have provided insights into the common mechanism of oxygen sensing and signal transduction, leading to activation of the hypoxia-inducible transcription factor 1 (HIF-1). Activation of HIF-1 by hypoxia depends on rescue of its alpha-subunit from oxygen-dependent degradation in the proteasome, allowing it to form a heterodimer with HIF-1 beta. This then translocates to the nucleus. There, HIF-1 assembles with a highly conserved orphan nuclear receptor, HNF-4, and a critical transcriptional adaptor, p300. This complex binds to a 3' enhancer on the erythropoietin gene, enabling transcription of erythropoietin. HIF-1 also activates other genes, the cis-acting elements of which contain cognate hypoxia response elements. There is growing evidence that the oxygen sensor is a flavohaem protein and that the signal transduction pathway involves changes in the level of intracellular reactive oxygen intermediates. We have recently cloned a novel fusion protein called cytochrome b5/b5 reductase, which is a cyanide-insensitive NADPH oxidase and, therefore, a candidate to be the oxygen sensor. This flavohaem protein is widely expressed in cell lines and tissues, with localization in the perinuclear space. In the presence of oxygen and iron, it may induce oxidative modifications that target HIF-1 alpha for ubiquitination and degradation.
Nephrol Dial Transplant 2002
PMID:Detecting and responding to hypoxia. 1181 5