Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0242706 (hyperoxia)
5,219 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Premature aging of the skin is a prominent side effect of psoralen photoactivation, a therapy widely and successfully used for different skin disorders. Recently, we demonstrated that treatment of fibroblasts with 8-methoxypsoralen and ultraviolet A irradiation resulted in growth arrest with morphological and functional changes reminiscent of replicative senescence. In this minireview we will focus on the similarities between intrinsic and extrinsic aging and PUVA-induced senescence-like growth arrest both resulting in the loss of the structural integrity of the dermal connective tissue as a hallmark of intrinsic aging and photoaging (extrinsic aging) of the skin, and we will discuss the important role of oxidative stress related telomere attrition in the PUVA-induced phenotype of dermal fibroblasts. With the PUVA-induced growth arrest of fibroblasts a new model has been added to the growing number of in vitro models with longterm growth arrest upon exposure to sublethal stressors (i.e. hyperoxia, hydrogen peroxide, ethanol), which are characterized by morphological and functional changes common for cellular senescence. This model may be particularly suited for further studies addressing mechanisms of stress-induced senescence-like growth arrest in vitro and in vivo, since many dermatological patients are treated with PUVA allowing the analysis of putative stress-induced premature senescence in vivo.
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PMID:Photoaging as a consequence of natural and therapeutic ultraviolet irradiation--studies on PUVA-induced senescence-like growth arrest of human dermal fibroblasts. 1469 6

Cockayne Syndrome (CS) is an autosomal recessive neurodegenerative premature aging disorder associated with defects in nucleotide excision repair (NER). Cells from CS patients, with mutations in CSA or CSB genes, present elevated levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and are defective in the repair of a variety of oxidatively generated DNA lesions. In this study, six purine lesions were ascertained in wild type (wt) CSA, defective CSA, wtCSB and defective CSB-transformed fibroblasts under different oxygen tensions (hyperoxic 21%, physioxic 5% and hypoxic 1%). In particular, the four 5',8-cyclopurine (cPu) and the two 8-oxo-purine (8-oxo-Pu) lesions were accurately quantified by LC-MS/MS analysis using isotopomeric internal standards after an enzymatic digestion procedure. cPu levels were found comparable to 8-oxo-Pu in all cases (3-6 lesions/106 nucleotides), slightly increasing on going from hyperoxia to physioxia to hypoxia. Moreover, higher levels of four cPu were observed under hypoxia in both CSA and CSB-defective cells as compared to normal counterparts, along with a significant enhancement of 8-oxo-Pu. These findings revealed that exposure to different oxygen tensions induced oxidative DNA damage in CS cells, repairable by NER or base excision repair (BER) pathways. In NER-defective CS patients, these results support the hypothesis that the clinical neurological features might be connected to the accumulation of cPu. Moreover, the elimination of dysfunctional mitochondria in CS cells is associated with a reduction in the oxidative DNA damage.
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PMID:Oxygen-Dependent Accumulation of Purine DNA Lesions in Cockayne Syndrome Cells. 3266 19