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)

After birth the proliferation of cardiac cells declines, and further growth of the heart occurs by hypertrophic cell growth. In the present study the cell proliferation capacity of mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells versus neonatal cardiomyocytes and the effects of reactive oxygen species (ROS) on cardiomyogenesis and cardiac cell proliferation of ES cells was investigated. Low levels of hydrogen peroxide stimulated cardiomyogenesis of ES cells and induced proliferation of cardiomyocytes derived from ES cells and neonatal mice, as investigated by nuclear translocation of cyclin D1, downregulation of p27(Kip1), phosphorylation of retinoblastoma (Rb), increase of Ki-67 expression and incorporation of BrdU. The observed effects were blunted by the free radical scavengers vitamin E and 2-mercaptoglycin (NMPG). In ES cells ROS induced expression of the cardiac-specific genes encoding alpha-actin, beta-MHC, MLC2a, MLC2v and ANP as well as the transcription factors GATA-4, Nkx-2.5, MEF2C, DTEF-1 and the growth factor BMP-10. During differentiation ES cells expressed the NADPH oxidase isoforms Nox-1, Nox-2 and Nox-4. Treatment of cardiac cells with ROS increased Nox-1, Nox-4, p22-phox, p47-phox and p67-phox proteins as well as Nox-1 and Nox-4 mRNA, indicating feed-forward regulation of ROS generation. Inhibition of NADPH oxidase with diphenylen iodonium chloride (DPI) and apocynin abolished ROS-induced cardiomyogenesis of ES cells. Our data suggest that proliferation of neonatal and ES-cell-derived cardiac cells involves ROS-mediated signalling cascades and point towards an involvement of NADPH oxidase in cardiovascular differentiation of ES cells.
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PMID:Stimulation of ES-cell-derived cardiomyogenesis and neonatal cardiac cell proliferation by reactive oxygen species and NADPH oxidase. 1729 80

Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARalpha, -beta and -gamma) are nuclear receptors involved in transcriptional regulation of lipid and energy metabolism. Since the energy demand increases when cardiac progenitor cells are developing rhythmic contractile activity, PPAR activation may play a critical role during cardiomyogenesis of embryonic stem (ES) cells. It is shown that ES cells express PPARalpha, -beta, and -gamma mRNA during differentiation of ES cells towards cardiac cells. Treatment with PPARalpha agonists (WY14643, GW7647, and ciprofibrate) significantly increased cardiomyogenesis and expression of the cardiac genes MLC2a, ANP, MHC-beta, MLC2v, and cardiac alpha-actin. Furthermore, WY14643 increased PPARalpha gene expression and the expression of the cardiogenic transcription factors GATA-4, Nkx2.5, DTEF-1, and MEF 2C. In contrast, the PPARalpha antagonist MK886 decreased cardiomyogenesis, whereas the PPARbeta agonist L-165,041 as well as the PPARgamma agonist GW1929 were without effects. Treatment with PPARalpha, but not PPARbeta, and PPARgamma agonists and MK886, resulted in generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which was inhibited in the presence of the NADPH oxidase inhibitors diphenylen iodonium (DPI) and apocynin and the free radical scavengers vitamin E and N-(2-mercapto-propionyl)-glycine (NMPG), whereas the mitochondrial complex I inhibitor rotenone was without effects. The effect of PPARalpha agonists on cardiomyogenesis of ES cells was abolished upon preincubation with free radical scavengers and NADPH oxidase inhibitors, indicating involvement of ROS in PPARalpha, mediated cardiac differentiation. In summary, our data indicate that stimulation of PPARalpha but not PPARbeta and -gamma enhances cardiomyogenesis in ES cells using a pathway that involves ROS and NADPH oxidase activity.
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PMID:Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha agonists enhance cardiomyogenesis of mouse ES cells by utilization of a reactive oxygen species-dependent mechanism. 1795 Dec 19