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Query: UMLS:C0242706 (
hyperoxia
)
5,219
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Existing systems of classification of carcinogens are a matter of discussion, world-wide. There is agreement that it should be distinguished between genotoxic and non-genotoxic chemicals. The risk assessment approach used for non-genotoxic chemicals is similar among different regulatory bodies: insertion of an uncertainty (safety) factor permits the derivation of permissible exposure levels at which no relevant human
cancer
risks are anticipated. For genotoxic carcinogens, case studies of chemicals point to a whole array of possibilities. Positive data of chromosomal effects only, in the absence of mutagenicity, may support the characterization of a compound that produces carcinogenic effects only at high, toxic doses. Non-DNA-reactive genotoxins, such as topoisomerase inhibitors or inhibitors of the spindle apparatus are considered in this respect. In such cases, arguments are in favour of the existence of "practical" thresholds. Taking existing concepts together, it is proposed to basically distinguish between "perfect" and "practical" thresholds. There is a wide consensus that for non-DNA-reactive genotoxins such as aneugens (aneuploidy, chromosome loss, non-disjunction) thresholds should be defined. It is being discussed as to whether the identification of possible threshold effects should also include other mechanisms of genotoxicity, in addition to aneugenic effects. Specific mechanisms of clastogenicity have been repeatedly addressed as also having thresholds, such as topoisomerase II poisons or mechanisms based on reactive oxygen. Oxidative stress as an important mechanism is triggered by exposure to exogenous factors such as ultraviolet (UV) and ionizing radiation, anoxia and
hyperoxia
, and by chemicals producing reactive oxygen species. The idea is receiving increased support that reactive oxygen species (ROS)-mediated processes of carcinogenesis have practical thresholds. Since reactive oxygen species are genotoxic in principle, questions arise whether chemicals that increase ROS production will superimpose to an endogenously produced background level of DNA lesions, related to mechanisms that may result in non-linear dose-effect relationships. The existence of "endogenous" DNA adducts has been generally accepted, and possible regulatory implications of the presence of endogenous carcinogens have been discussed. It is now becoming evident that a diversity of methods of carcinogenic risk extrapolation to low doses must be considered, dependent on the mode of action. Although there is an increasing international awareness of these developments, the system of classification of carcinogens of the European Union still remains static. This should be changed, as the philosophy of separation of a strictly sequential "hazard assessment" and "risk assessment" appears out-of-date.
...
PMID:Carcinogenicity categorization of chemicals-new aspects to be considered in a European perspective. 1517 38
Chronic inflammation predisposes toward many types of
cancer
. Chronic bronchitis and asthma, for example, heighten the risk of lung cancer. Exactly which inflammatory mediators (e.g., oxidant species and growth factors) and lung wound repair processes (e.g., proangiogenic factors) enhance pulmonary neoplastic development is not clear. One approach to uncover the most relevant biochemical and physiological pathways is to identify genes underlying susceptibilities to inflammation and to
cancer
development at the same anatomic site. Mice develop lung adenocarcinomas similar in histology, molecular characteristics, and histogenesis to this most common human lung cancer subtype. Over two dozen loci, called Pas or pulmonary adenoma susceptibility, Par or pulmonary adenoma resistance, and Sluc or susceptibility to lung cancer genes, regulate differential lung tumor susceptibility among inbred mouse strains as assigned by QTL (quantitative trait locus) mapping. Chromosomal sites that determine responsiveness to proinflammatory pneumotoxicants such as ozone (O3), particulates, and
hyperoxia
have also been mapped in mice. For example, susceptibility QTLs have been identified on chromosomes 17 and 11 for O3-induced inflammation (Inf1, Inf2), O3-induced acute lung injury (Aliq3, Aliq1), and sulfate-associated particulates. Sites within the human and mouse genomes for asthma and COPD phenotypes have also been delineated. It is of great interest that several susceptibility loci for mouse lung neoplasia also contain susceptibility genes for toxicant-induced lung injury and inflammation and are homologous to several human asthma loci. These QTLs are described herein, candidate genes are suggested within these sites, and experimental evidence that inflammation enhances lung tumor development is provided.
...
PMID:Susceptibility to neoplastic and non-neoplastic pulmonary diseases in mice: genetic similarities. 1535 60
Nuclear factor, erythroid 2 related factor 2 (Nrf2) belongs to the Cap'n'collar/basic region leucine zipper (CNC-bZIP) transcription factor family, and is activated by diverse oxidants, pro-oxidants, antioxidants, and chemopreventive agents. After phosphorylation and dissociation from the cytoplasmic inhibitor, Kelch-like ECH-associated protein 1 (Keap1), Nrf2 translocates to the nucleus and binds to an antioxidant response element (ARE). Through transcriptional induction of ARE-bearing genes that encode antioxidant-detoxifying proteins, Nrf2 activates cellular rescue pathways against oxidative injury, inflammation/immunity, apoptosis, and carcinogenesis. ARE-driven genes include direct antioxidants (e.g., GPx), thiol metabolism-associated detoxifying enzymes (e.g., GSTs), stress-response genes (e.g., HO-1), and others (e.g., PSMB5). Application of nrf2 germ-line mutant mice elucidated protective roles for Nrf2 in various models of human disorders in the liver, lung, kidney, brain, and circulation. In the lung, deficiency of nrf2 augmented injury caused by bleomycin and environmental oxidants including
hyperoxia
, diesel exhaust particles, and cigarette smoke. Microarray analyses of lungs from nrf2-deficient and -sufficient mice identified Nrf2-dependent genes that might be critical in pulmonary protection. Observations from these studies highlight the importance of the Nrf2-antioxidant pathway and may provide new therapeutic strategies for acute respiratory distress syndrome, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis,
cancer
, and emphysema in which oxidative stress is implicated.
...
PMID:Nrf2 defends the lung from oxidative stress. 1648 40
One unique feature of tumors is the presence of hypoxic regions, which occur predominantly at the tumor center. Hypoxia has a major impact on various aspects of tumor cell function and proliferation. Hypoxic tumor cells are relatively insensitive to conventional therapy owing to cellular adaptations effected by the hypoxic microenvironment. Recent efforts have aimed to alter the hypoxic state and to reverse these adaptations to improve treatment outcome. One way to increase tumor oxygen tensions is by hyperbaric oxygen (HBO) therapy. HBO therapy can influence the tumor microenvironment at several levels. It can alter tumor hypoxia, a potent stimulus that drives angiogenesis.
Hyperoxia
as a result of HBO also produces reactive oxygen species, which can damage tumors by inducing excessive oxidative stress. This review outlines the importance of oxygen to tumors and the mechanisms by which tumors survive under hypoxic conditions. It also presents data from both experimental and clinical studies for the effect of HBO on
malignancy
.
...
PMID:Hyperbaric oxygen therapy for malignancy: a review. 1710 15
The biological evolution has resulted in adaptation of both unicellular and multicellular organisms to negative effect of excessive O2 in reply to gradual increase of free oxygen (O2) contents in the earth atmosphere. This adaptation has led to formation of various antioxidant systems in the organism. Such system within the cell has hierarchic structure and is represented by at least than three levels of protection: antioxygene, antiradical and antiperoxide. The first and most effective antioxidant level is represented as mitochondrial respiration able to perform several functions. One of these functions is antioxygene since the very the mitochondria's capability to be a main O2 consumer in the cell provides for low but sufficient for respiration and energy supply levels of O2 partial pressure and dependent concentrations of active O2 forms. The latters, being signal molecules at certain values, modify regular and synthetic processes in the cells either directly or indirectly. This is the possibility for mitochondria to more extensively affect the intracellular processes than simply produce ATP. In case of defective of the cell first protection line the
hyperoxia
starts due to poor utilization of the incoming O2. Change in mitochondria's "capacity" (quantity, size and maturity level of mitochondria) anyway occurring in the cells are an efficient way of regulation of the oxy-peroxide condition (oxidative stress) and related signal channels. The relationship between changes in the condition of cells, i.e. from their normal state to different pathologic forms, and growing disbalance Delta(PO-AO) between its pro-oxygen (PO) and anti-oxygen (AO) components has been assumed. It is expected that during the evolution the cell could have supposedly acquired a sequence of "specialized" Delta(PO-AO) disbalances. Each sequence needs to implement a certain set of biochemical processes. The probability of Delta(PO-AO) disbalance gradation with specification of their value ranges has been determined. These ranges identify or impact certain cell state, namely proliferation of normal cell (oxidative mitogenesis), ageing, A1 apoptosis, carcinogenesis, A2 apoptosis, and oxidative cytolysis. The cited assumption allows us to: (1) explain reverse dependence of cell proliferation due to the level of their differentiation, increase in the amount and activity of mitochondria as an indispensable condition for the disbalance shift towards differentiation, (2) bring up the idea that regress of the cells, and in particular tumour cells, directly results from the Delta(PO-AO) disbalance decrease to certain levels under the influence of reverse inductors, (3) explain relatively easy and frequent embryonic and stem cells
malignancy
, and also their reversal normalization. These phenomena occur due to small number and/or size of mitochondria in the designated cells. To verify the above mentioned hypotheses it is primarily necessary to be able to stimulate and slow down the mitochondria biogenesis in the embryonic, stem, ageing,
cancer
and other cells.
...
PMID:Four hypotheses on mitochondria's role in the development and regulation of oxidative stress in the normal state, cell pathology and reversion of tumor cells. 1720 37
Nitrosamines are carcinogens formed in the mammalian organism from amine precursors contained in food, beverages, cosmetics and drugs. The potent carcinogen, NNK, and the weaker carcinogen, NNN, are nitrosamines formed from nicotine. Metabolites of the nitrosamines react with DNA to form adducts responsible for genotoxic effects. We have identified NNK as a high affinity agonist for the alpha7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (alpha7nAChR) whereas NNN bound with high affinity to epibatidine-sensitive nAChRs. Diethylnitrosamine (DEN) bound to both receptors but with lower affinity. High levels of the alpha7nAChR were expressed in human small cell lung cancer (SCLC) cell lines and in hamster pulmonary neuroendocrine cells (PNECs), which serve as a model for the cell of origin of human SCLC. Exposure of SCLC or PNECs to NNK or nicotine increased expression of the alpha7nAChR and caused influx of Ca(2+), activation of PKC, Raf-1, ERK1/2, and c-myc, resulting in the stimulation of cell proliferation. Signaling via the alpha7nAChR was enhanced when cells were maintained in an environment of 10-15% CO(2) similar to that in the diseased lung. Hamsters with
hyperoxia
-induced pulmonary fibrosis developed neuroendocrine lung carcinomas similar to human SCLC when treated with NNK, DEN, or nicotine. The development of the NNK-induced tumors was prevented by green tea or theophylline. The beta-adrenergic receptor agonist, isoproterenol or theophylline blocked NNK-induced cell proliferation in vitro. NNK and nicotine-induced hyperactivity of the alpha7nAChR/RAF/ERK1/2 pathway thus appears to play a crucial role in the development of SCLC in smokers and could be targeted for
cancer
prevention.
...
PMID:Nitrosamines as nicotinic receptor ligands. 1745 20
The INK4 and CIP cyclin-dependent kinase (Cdk) inhibitors (CKI) activate pocket protein function by suppressing Cdk4 and Cdk2, respectively. Although these inhibitors are lost in tumors, deletion of individual CKIs results in modest proliferation defects in murine models. We have evaluated cooperativity between loss of all INK4 family members (using cdk4r24c mutant alleles that confer resistant to INK4 inhibitors) and p21(Waf1/Cip1) in senescence and transformation of mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEF). We show that mutant cdk4r24c and p21 loss cooperate in pRb inactivation and MEF immortalization. Our studies suggest that cdk4r24c mediates resistance to p15(INK4B)/p16(INK4A) that accumulates over passage, whereas loss of p21 suppresses
hyperoxia
-induced Cdk2 inhibition and pRb dephosphorylation on MEF explantation in culture. Although cdk4r24c and p21 loss cooperate in H-ras(V12)/c-myc-induced foci formation, they are insufficient for oncogene-induced anchorage-independent growth. Interestingly, p21(-/-); cdk4r24c MEFs expressing H-ras(V12) and c-myc display detachment-induced apoptosis and are transformed by c-myc, H-ras(V12), and Bcl-2. We conclude that the INK4 family and p21 loss cooperate in promoting pRb inactivation, cell immortalization, and H-ras(V12)/c-myc-induced loss of contact inhibition. In addition, absence of pRb function renders H-ras(V12) + c-myc-transduced fibroblasts prone to apoptosis when deprived of the extracellular matrix, and oncogene-induced anchorage-independent growth of pocket protein-deficient cells requires apoptotic suppression.
Cancer
Res 2007 May 01
PMID:p21 loss cooperates with INK4 inactivation facilitating immortalization and Bcl-2-mediated anchorage-independent growth of oncogene-transduced primary mouse fibroblasts. 1748 23
Oxygen is an essential element in the survival of complex organisms, however the level of oxygen, low or high, can be a source of stress depending on the biological context. Low levels of oxygen in tissues (hypoxia) can be the consequence of a number of pathophysiological conditions including ischemic disorders and
cancer
while relative, higher levels (
hyperoxia
) can lead to retinopathy of prematurity. The local oxygen environment and oxygen consumption dictate vascular homeostasis, vaso-proliferation and vaso-cessation, which is deregulated in these diseases through oxygen-dependent growth factors. In this review, we will introduce aspects of the physiology and biology of oxygen partial pressure and the molecular mechanisms implicated in oxygen sensing. We will outline the regulation and function of the key operator in cellular signalling of hypoxia, the transcription factor, hypoxia-inducible factor. In addition, we will focus on
cancer
cell hypoxia and on its role in driving cell metabolism, pH regulation and survival.
...
PMID:Oxygen, a source of life and stress. 1758
The mitochondrial succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) is an essential component of the electron transport chain and of the tricarboxylic acid cycle. Also known as complex II, this tetrameric enzyme catalyzes the oxidation of succinate to fumarate and reduces ubiquinone. Mutations in the human SDHB, SDHC, and SDHD genes are tumorigenic, leading to the development of several types of tumors, including paraganglioma and pheochromocytoma. The mechanisms linking SDH mutations to oncogenesis are still unclear. In this work, we used the yeast SDH to investigate the molecular and catalytic effects of tumorigenic or related mutations. We mutated Arg(47) of the Sdh3p subunit to Cys, Glu, and Lys and Asp(88) of the Sdh4p subunit to Asn, Glu, and Lys. Both Arg(47) and Asp(88) are conserved residues, and Arg(47) is a known site of
cancer
causing mutations in humans. All of the mutants examined have reduced ubiquinone reductase activities. The SDH3 R47K, SDH4 D88E, and SDH4 D88N mutants are sensitive to
hyperoxia
and paraquat and have elevated rates of superoxide production in vitro and in vivo. We also observed the accumulation and secretion of succinate. Succinate can inhibit prolyl hydroxylase enzymes, which initiate a proliferative response through the activation of hypoxia-inducible factor 1alpha. We suggest that SDH mutations can promote tumor formation by contributing to both reactive oxygen species production and to a proliferative response normally induced by hypoxia via the accumulation of succinate.
...
PMID:Ubiquinone-binding site mutations in the Saccharomyces cerevisiae succinate dehydrogenase generate superoxide and lead to the accumulation of succinate. 1763 59
It is generally accepted that chronic inflammatory disease, either local or generalized, is associated with higher incidence of
cancer
. Since inflammation is often accompanied by oxidative stress the latter was indicated as the foundation for progressive mutations leading to tumor development (proliferation, invasion, metastasis). Even though, it is very hard to demonstrate by in vitro studies the causal relationship between oxidative stress and cell transformations. From our studies it is clear that cells are more likely to stop divisions and they commit suicide by apoptosis. During last decade, a novel view on the origin of
cancer
emerged. The so called
cancer
stem cells (CSC) were found that form the side-population of stem cells (SC) and they are believed to initiate
cancer
. Are the SC ancestors for CSC? Do SC transform into CSC? These and other questions remain unanswered. We hypothesize that SC might undergo transformation into CSC during prolonged oxidative stress. We claim that several changes in cell biochemistry has to occur to start the molecular modifications leading to neoplasma. These include either hypoxia-promoted apoptosis signal inducing kinase 1 (ASK-1), hypoxia inducing factor 1 alpha (HIF-1alpha) and glycolysis, or normoxia-promoted activating protein-1 (AP-1) or
hyperoxia
-induced nuclear factor kappa B (NF-kappaB). Next, harsh microenvironment and heterogenous extracellular matrix (ECM) induced by oxidative stress accelerate the selection of clones of cells resistant to apoptogenic signal. HIF-1alpha, protein crucial for transcriptional activation of protooncogene met leads to the overexpression of c-Met receptor that in turn sensitizes cells to hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/SF) mitogen. Finally, both impaired function of mitochondria and hypoxia elevate fibrin protein level and amplify hemostasis as disseminated intracapillary coagulation (DIC). In any case, it is very interesting and remains to be answered whether imbalance in prooxidant-antioxidant homeostasis has causal relationship with transformation of SC to CSC.
...
PMID:Possible implications of redox-sensitive tumour cell transformation; lessons from cell culture studies. 1788 38
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