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Query: UMLS:C0242706 (hyperoxia)
5,219 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

It is well known that exposure to hyperoxia results in lung inflammation and damage, which leads to the development of chronic lung disease. Previous studies have shown increased activities of antioxidant enzymes (AOE) in lung tissue from animals exposed to hyperoxia. We propose the hypothesis that the fetal type II pneumocytes (TIIP) would be resistant to oxygen toxicity by virtue of increasing AOE activity on exposure to hyperoxia. The aim of this study was to measure the activities of catalase, glutathione reductase, glutathione peroxidase (GPX), and cytosolic superoxide dismutase (SOD) in cultures of adult and fetal rat TIIP exposed to 95% oxygen for 24 h. Control cells were incubated in room air. Hyperoxia exposure resulted in 53.4 +/- 1.2% of control viability (mean +/- S.E.M.; p = 0.001) in the adult TIIP with a significant threefold increase in the activities of all the AOE. The fetal TIIP were more resistant to hyperoxia (99.4 +/- 6.1% of control viability). However, in the fetal TIIP, only SOD and GPX levels were significantly increased (fourfold and 2.3-fold, respectively) compared with fetal controls. We conclude that fetal TIIP are more resistant to hyperoxia than adult TIIP in terms of viability; other protective antioxidant factors might account for the better survival of fetal TIIP in hyperoxia.
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PMID:Hyperoxia causes an increase in antioxidant enzyme activity in adult and fetal rat type II pneumocytes. 1072 20

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are implicated as agents of cellular damage in pulmonary oxygen toxicity. Glutathione (GSH) and GSH-dependent antioxidant enzymes protect against damage by ROS, and recycling of glutathione disulfide (GSSG) to GSH by glutathione reductase (GR) is essential for the optimum functioning of this system. Exposure to hyperoxia inhibits lung development in newborn animals and humans, and attenuates cell growth in proliferating cell cultures. Considerable evidence supports a role for ROS as growth-altering molecules. Previously, we have observed that gene transfer of GR to mitochondria in H441 cells, using a vector containing a mitochondrial leader sequence (LGR), protected these cells against t-BuOOH-induced cytotoxicity. The present studies tested the hypothesis that gene transfer of LGR would attenuate the cytostatic effects of hyperoxia exposure in H441 cells. H441 cells (0.9 x 10(6) cells/plate) transfected with adenovirus containing LGR or the complementary DNA (cDNA) for manganese superoxide dismutase in reverse orientation (DOS) as a control construct, and untransfected cells (CON) were maintained in 21% oxygen (normoxia) or 95% oxygen (hyperoxia) for 48 h, and cell growth was assessed by cell counts and by reduction of the tetrazolium dye 3-(4,5 dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyl tetrazolium bromide (MTT) to formazan. Cells maintained in normoxia achieved normal growth (CON, 1.98; DOS, 1.91; LGR, 2.0 x 10(6) cells/plate). Hyperoxia inhibited cell growth and the reduction of MTT; however, cells transfected with LGR had greater mitochondrial GR activities (CON, 16+/-2; DOS, 19+/-3; LGR, 322+/-18 mU/mg of protein), sustained more normal growth patterns (CON, 1.25+/-0.12; DOS, 1.24 +/-0.21, LGR, 1.8+/-0.25 x 10(6) cells/plate), and had less inhibition of MTT reduction (CON, 29; DOS, 27; LGR, 16% inhibition, P<0.01) after exposure to hyperoxia for 48 h than was observed in cells transfected with DOS or in control cells not infected with virus. In addition, resistant cells had higher mitochondrial GSH levels and maintained mitochondrial GSH/GSSG ratios in hyperoxia, suggesting that maintaining mitochondrial GSH homeostasis determined critical aspects of cell division in these studies. The mechanisms for sustaining cell growth during hyperoxia in H441 cells with enhanced mitochondrial GR activities are unknown, but similar effects in infants exposed to supplemental oxygen could be highly beneficial.
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PMID:Attenuation of hyperoxia-induced growth inhibition in H441 cells by gene transfer of mitochondrially targeted glutathione reductase. 1083 71

Nitric oxide (NO) shows cytotoxicity, and its reaction products with reactive oxygen species, such as peroxynitrite, are potentially more toxic. To examine the role of O2 in the NO toxicity, we have examined the proliferation of cultured human umbilical vein endothelial cells in the presence or absence of NO donor, ((Z)-1-[N-(2-aminoethyl)-N-(2-ammonioethyl)amino]diazen-1-++ +ium-1,2-diolate) (DETA-NONOate) (100-500 microM), under normoxia (air), hypoxia (< 0.04% O2) or hyperoxia (88-94% O2). It was found that the dose dependency on NONOate was little affected by the ambient O2 concentration, showing no apparent synergism between the two treatments. We have also examined the effects of exogenous NO under normoxia and hyperoxia on the cellular activities of antioxidant enzymes involved in the H2O2 elimination, since many of them are known to be inhibited by NO or peroxynitrite in vitro. Under normoxia DETA-NONOate (500 microM) caused 25% decrease in catalase activity and 30% increases in glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase activities in 24h. Under hyperoxia NO caused about 25% decreases in activities of catalase, glutathione reductase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. The H2O2 removal rate by NO-treated cells was computed on the mathematical model for the enzyme system. It was concluded that the cellular antioxidant function is little affected by NO under normoxia but that it is partially impaired when the cells are exposed to NO under hyperoxia.
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PMID:Interactions of nitric oxide and oxygen in cytotoxicity: proliferation and antioxidant enzyme activities of endothelial cells in culture. 1088 22

Exposure to high fractional inspired oxygen for 24 h increases permeability of the alveolar epithelium, contributing to the clinical manifestations of oxygen toxicity. Utilizing a model of the alveolar epithelium in which isolated rat type II cells form polarized monolayers on polycarbonate filters [transepithelial resistance (R(t)) > 1 k Omega x cm(2) by day 4], we evaluated the ability of reduced glutathione (GSH) to ameliorate these changes. On day 4, apical fluid was replaced with culture medium containing 1) no additives, 2) GSH (500 microM), or 3) GSH (500 microM) + glutathione reductase (0.5 U/ml) + nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (250 microM). Monolayers were exposed (for 24 h) to room air (control) or 95% O(2), each containing 5% CO(2). After 24 h of hyperoxia, R(t) for condition 1 decreased by 45% compared with control (P < 0.001). In conditions 2 and 3, R(t) did not decrease significantly (P = not significant). Hyperoxia-induced decreases in active ion transport were observed for conditions 1 and 2 (P < 0.05), but not for condition 3 (P = not significant). These findings indicate that extracellular GSH may protect the alveolar epithelium against hyperoxia-induced injury. Addition of glutathione reductase and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate may further augment these protective effects of GSH.
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PMID:Extracellular glutathione inhibits oxygen-induced permeability changes in alveolar epithelial monolayers. 1145 90

Patients with poorly functioning lungs often require treatment with high concentrations of supplemental oxygen, which, although often necessary to sustain life, can cause lung injury. The mechanisms responsible for hyperoxic lung injury have been investigated intensely and most probably involve oxidant stress responses, but the details are not well understood. In the present studies, we exposed adult male C57/Bl6 mice to >95% O2 for up to 72 h and obtained lung and liver samples for assessment of lung injury, measurements of tissue concentrations of coenzyme A (CoASH) and the corresponding mixed disulfide with glutathione (CoASSG), as possible biomarkers of intramitochondrial thiol redox status. Subcellular fractions were prepared from both tissues for determination of glutathione reductase (GR) activities. Lung injury in the hyperoxic mice was demonstrated by increases in lung weight to body weight ratios at 48 h and by increases in bronchoalveolar lavage protein concentrations at 72 h. Lung CoASH concentrations declined in the hyperoxic mice, but CoASSG concentrations were not increased nor were CoASH/CoASSG ratios decreased, as would be expected for an oxidant shift in mitochondrial thiol-disulfide status. Interestingly, CoASSG concentrations increased (from 6.72+/-0.54 to 14.10+/-1.10 nmol/g of liver in air-breathing controls and 72 h of hyperoxia, respectively, P<0.05), and CoASH/CoASSG ratios decreased in the livers of mice exposed to hyperoxia. Some apparent effects of duration of hyperoxia on GR activities in lung or liver cytosolic, mitochondrial, or nuclear fractions were observed, but the changes were not consistent or progressive. Yields of isolated hepatic nuclear protein were decreased in the hyperoxic mice within 24 h of exposure, and by 72 h of hyperoxia, protein recoveries in purified nuclear fractions had declined from 41.8 to 14.8 mg of protein/g animal body weight. Concentrations of 10-formyltetrahydrofolate dehydrogenase were diminished in hepatic mitochondria of hyperoxic mice. A second protein in hepatic mitochondria of approximately 25 kDa showed apparent decreases in thiol content, as determined by fluorescence intensities of monobromobimane derivatives separated by SDS-PAGE. The mechanisms responsible for the observed effects and the possible implications for the adverse effects of hyperoxic therapies are not known and need to be investigated.
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PMID:Mitochondrial thiol status in the liver is altered by exposure to hyperoxia. 1164 Oct 46

In this brief review the antioxidative actions of melatonin are summarized and they are discussed relative to several models of oxidative neurotoxicity. Melatonin is a ubiquitously acting antioxidant. It has been shown to scavenge the hydroxyl radical, peroxyl radical, singlet oxygen and the peroxynitrite anion; secondarily, it also scavenges the superoxide anion radical. In addition, melatonin reportedly stimulates a number of antioxidative enzymes including glutathione peroxidase, glutathione reductase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. On the other hand, melatonin inhibits the pro-oxidative enzyme nitric oxide synthase. Besides these actions which help to resist oxidative damage, melatonin prevents membrane rigidity, reduces polymorphonuclear cell infiltration into damaged tissue, limits the adhesion of leucocytes to endothelial cells, thereby increasing blood flow and reducing edema. Some or all of these actions may have been operative in the experimental models of oxidative neurotoxicity that were improved by melatonin treatment. In brief, melatonin has been found to protect the CNS from beta-amyloid toxicity, experimental models of Parkinsonism, excitotoxicity, nitric oxide toxicity, aminolevulinic acid, lipopolysaccharide, hyperbaric hyperoxia, L-cysteine, cyanide and ischemia/reperfusion injury.
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PMID:Oxidative toxicity in models of neurodegeneration: responses to melatonin. 1267 8

We have shown previously with in vivo and in vitro animal models that the lens epithelium, in contrast to the nucleus, is remarkably resistant to hyperoxia. The main purpose of this study was to investigate the mRNA response of cultured human lens epithelial cells (LECs) to challenge by a high level of hyperbaric oxygen. Cells were treated for 3 hr with 50 atm of 99% O2, and then cultured normally for various times up to 11 days. Although the cells appeared normal immediately after the O2-treatment, they failed to grow and suffered 50% cell loss, as well as significant mitochondrial damage, during normal post-culture. Growth of the cells resumed after 3 days and by day 11, the number of O2-treated cells was the same as the controls. Remarkably, the 3 hr O2-treatment produced no immediate effects on either the cellular level of GSH, or on the activities of a number of antioxidant enzymes including glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, which is generally regarded as being highly sensitive to oxidation. In contrast, the activity of thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) was severely affected by the O2, decreasing by 51% after the 3 hr exposure. O2-induced death of the cells appeared to be caused by loss of ATP since a 31% decrease in ATP level occurred immediately after the O2-treatment, in spite of a 46% increase in lactate production. Analysis with real-time PCR showed a maximum 3-6-fold increase in mRNA levels 9 hr after the 3 hr O2-exposure for the enzymes heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1), MnSOD and TrxR1 (the cytoplasmic form of TrxR). These results were confirmed with the use of one-step RT-PCR and Northern blotting. Initial upregulation of message for HO-1 occurred a few hours before any upregulation of MnSOD could be detected, suggesting that release of free iron from the degradation of heme by HO-1 may have played a role in the upregulation of the dismutase. No significant changes in mRNA levels were observed for the antioxidant enzymes catalase, CuZnSOD, glutathione reductase and glutathione peroxidase, or for the antioxidant protein thioredoxin. Recovery of TrxR activity over a 4-day period appeared to parallel the return of the cells to a normal rate of growth. The results indicate that damaging effects of hyperoxia on cultured LECs occur primarily in the mitochondria, rather than in the cytoplasm. Cells avoid O2-induced cell death, and return to a normal rate of proliferation by upregulating mRNA levels for HO-1, MnSOD and TrxR1. It appears that full activity of TrxR1, an enzyme required for the production of deoxyribonucletides for DNA synthesis, is essential for the normal growth of O2-challenged LECs.
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PMID:Thioredoxin reductase may be essential for the normal growth of hyperbaric oxygen-treated human lens epithelial cells. 1564 22

The effects of hyperoxia on the status of antioxidant defenses and markers of oxidative damage were evaluated in goldfish tissues. The levels of lipid peroxides, thiobarbituric acid reactive substances, carbonyl proteins and the activities of some antioxidant enzymes were measured in brain, liver, kidney and skeletal muscle of goldfish, Carassius auratus L., over a time course of 3-12 h of hyperoxia exposure followed by 12 or 36 h of normoxic recovery. Exposure to high oxygen resulted in an accumulation of protein carbonyls in tissues throughout hyperoxia and recovery whereas lipid peroxides and thiobarbituric acid reactive substances accumulated transiently under short-term hyperoxia stress (3-6 h) but were then strongly reduced. This suggests that hyperoxia stimulated an enhancement of defenses against lipid peroxidation or mechanisms for enhancing the catabolism of peroxidation products. The activities of principal antioxidant enzymes, superoxide dismutase and catalase, were not altered under hyperoxia but catalase increased during normoxic recovery; activities may rise in anticipation of further hyperoxic excursions. In most tissues, the activities of glutathione-utilizing enzymes (glutathione peroxidase, glutathione-S-transferase, glutathione reductase) as well as glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, were not affected under hyperoxia but increased sharply during normoxic recovery. Correlations between some enzyme activities and oxidative stress markers were found, for example, an inverse correlation was seen between levels of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances and glutathione-S-transferase activity in liver and catalase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase in kidney. The results suggest that liver glutathione-S-transferase plays an important role in detoxifying end products of lipid peroxidation accumulated under hyperoxia stress.
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PMID:Hyperoxia results in transient oxidative stress and an adaptive response by antioxidant enzymes in goldfish tissues. 1589 73

Reduction of glutathione disulfide (GSSG) to glutathione (GSH) by glutathione reductase (GR) enhances the efficiency of GSH-dependent antioxidant activities. However, GR-deficient (a1Neu) mice are less susceptible to acute lung injury from continuous exposure to > 95% O(2) (96 h: 6.9 +/- 0.1 g right lung/kg body versus room air 3.6 +/- 0.3) than are C3H/HeN control mice (10.6 +/- 1.3 versus 4.2 +/- 0.3, P < 0.001). a1Neu mice have greater hepatic thioredoxin (Trx)1 and Trx2 levels than do C3H/HeN mice, suggesting compensation for the absence of GR. a1Neu mice exposed to hyperoxia for 96 hours showed lower levels of inflammatory infiltrates in lungs than did similarly exposed C3H/HeN mice. Pretreatment with aurothioglucose (ATG), a thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) inhibitor, exacerbated the effects of hyperoxia on lung injury in a1Neu mice (11.6 +/- 0.8, P < 0.001), but attenuated hyperoxic lung edema and inflammation in C3H/HeN mice (6.3 +/- 0.4, P < 0.001). No consistent alterations were observed in lung GSH contents or liver GSH or GSSG levels after ATG pretreatment. The data suggest that modulation of Trx/TrxR systems might provide therapeutically useful alterations of cellular resistance to oxidant stresses. The protective effects of ATG against hyperoxic lung injury could prove to be particularly useful therapeutically.
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PMID:Thioredoxin-related mechanisms in hyperoxic lung injury in mice. 1757 77

Exposure of the lung epithelium to reactive oxygen species without adequate antioxidant defenses leads to airway inflammation, and may contribute to lung injury. Glutathione peroxidase catalyzes the reduction of peroxides by oxidation of glutathione (GSH) to glutathione disulfide (GSSG), which can in turn be reduced by glutathione reductase (GR). Increased levels of GSSG have been shown to correlate negatively with outcome after oxidant exposure, and increased GR activity has been protective against hyperoxia in lung epithelial cells in vitro. We tested the hypothesis that increased GR expression targeted to type II alveolar epithelial cells would improve outcome in hyperoxia-induced lung injury. Human GR with a mitochondrial targeting sequence was targeted to mouse type II cells using the SPC promoter. Two transgenic lines were identified, with Line 2 having higher lung GR activities than Line 1. Both transgenic lines had lower lung GSSG levels and higher GSH/GSSG ratios than wild-type. Six-week-old wild-type and transgenic mice were exposed to greater than 95% O2 or room air (RA) for 84 hours. After exposure, Line 2 mice had higher right lung/body weight ratios and lavage protein concentrations than wild-type mice, and both lines 1 and 2 had lower GSSG levels than wild-type mice. These findings suggest that GSSG accumulation in the lung may not play a significant role in the development of hyperoxic lung injury, or that compensatory responses to unregulated GR expression render animals more susceptible to hyperoxic lung injury.
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PMID:Glutathione reductase targeted to type II cells does not protect mice from hyperoxic lung injury. 1856 33


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