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

Replicative senescence of human diploid fibroblasts (HDFs) or melanocytes is caused by the exhaustion of their proliferative potential. Stress-induced premature senescence (SIPS) occurs after many different sublethal stresses including H(2)O(2), hyperoxia, or tert-butylhydroperoxide. Cells in replicative senescence share common features with cells in SIPS: morphology, senescence-associated beta-galactosidase activity, cell cycle regulation, gene expression and telomere shortening. Telomere shortening is attributed to the accumulation of DNA single-strand breaks induced by oxidative damage. SIPS could be a mechanism of accumulation of senescent-like cells in vivo. Melanocytes exposed to sublethal doses of UVB undergo SIPS. Melanocytes from dark- and light- skinned populations display differences in their cell cycle regulation. Delayed SIPS occurs in melanocytes from light-skinned populations since a reduced association of p16(Ink-4a) with CDK4 and reduced phosphorylation of the retinoblastoma protein are observed. The role of reactive oxygen species in melanocyte SIPS is unclear. Both replicative senescence and SIPS are dependent on two major pathways. One is triggered by DNA damage, telomere damage and/or shortening and involves the activation of the p53 and p21(waf-1) proteins. The second pathway results in the accumulation of p16(Ink-4a) with the MAP kinase signalling pathway as possible intermediate. These data corroborate the thermodynamical theory of ageing, according to which the exposure of cells to sublethal stresses of various natures can trigger SIPS, with possible modulations of this process by bioenergetics.
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PMID:Cellular and molecular mechanisms of stress-induced premature senescence (SIPS) of human diploid fibroblasts and melanocytes. 1112 81

Exposure of the lung to severe hyperoxia induces terminal transferase dUTP end-labeling (TUNEL) indicative of DNA damage or apoptosis and increases expression of the tumor suppressor p53 and of members of the Bcl-2 gene family. Because cell survival and apoptosis are regulated, in part, by the relative abundance of proteins of the Bcl-2 family, we hypothesized that lung cells dying during exposure would show increased expression of pro-apoptotic members, such as Bax, whereas surviving cells would have increased expression of anti-apoptotic members, such as Bcl-X(L). The hypothesis is tested in the current study by determining which Bcl-2 genes are regulated by hyperoxia, with specific focus on correlating expression of Bax and Bcl-X(L) with morphologic evidence of apoptosis or necrosis. Adult mice exposed to greater than 95% oxygen concentrations for 48 to 88 hours had increased whole-lung mRNA levels of Bax and Bcl-X(L), no change in Bak, Bad, or Bcl-2, and decreased levels of Bcl-w and Bfl-1. In situ hybridization revealed that hyperoxia induced Bax and Bcl-X(L) mRNA in uniform and overlapping patterns of expression throughout terminal bronchioles and parenchyma, coinciding with TUNEL staining. Electron microscopy and DNA electrophoresis, however, suggested relatively little classical apoptosis. Unexpectedly, Western analysis demonstrated increased Bcl-X(L), but not Bax, protein in response to hyperoxia. Bax and Bfl-1 were not altered by hyperoxia in p53 null mice; however, oxygen toxicity was not lessened by p53 deficiency. These findings suggest that oxygen-induced lung injury does not depend on the relative expression of these Bcl-2 members.
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PMID:Bcl-2 family gene expression during severe hyperoxia induced lung injury. 1114 Jun 97

Previous studies have shown that hyperoxia inhibits proliferation and increases the expression of the tumor suppressor p53 and its downstream target, the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21(CIP1/WAF1), which inhibits proliferation in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. To determine whether growth arrest was mediated through activation of the p21-dependent G1 checkpoint, the kinetics of cell cycle movement during exposure to 95% O2 were assessed in the Mv1Lu and A549 pulmonary adenocarcinoma cell lines. Cell counts, 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine incorporation, and cell cycle analyses revealed that growth arrest of both cell lines occurred in S phase, with A549 cells also showing evidence of a G1 arrest. Hyperoxia increased p21 in A549 but not in Mv1Lu cells, consistent with the activation of the p21-dependent G1 checkpoint. The ability of p21 to exert the G1 arrest was confirmed by showing that hyperoxia inhibited proliferation of HCT 116 colon carcinoma cells predominantly in G1, whereas an isogenic line lacking p21 arrested in S phase. The cell cycle arrest in S phase appears to be a p21-independent process caused by a gradual reduction in the rate of DNA strand elongation. Our data reveal that hyperoxia inhibits proliferation in G1 and S phase and demonstrate that p53 and p21 retain their ability to affect G1 checkpoint control during exposure to elevated O2 levels.
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PMID:The role of p21(CIP1/WAF1) in growth of epithelial cells exposed to hyperoxia. 1123 1

The lung is a major target tissue for oxidative stress, including hyperoxia used to relieve tissue hypoxia. Unfortunately, severe hyperoxia damages DNA, inhibits proliferation, and kills cells, resulting in morbidity and mortality. Although hyperoxia induces the tumor suppressor p53 and its downstream target, the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21(Cip1/WAF1/Sdi1) (p21), their role in pulmonary injury remains unknown. Using p53- and p21-deficient mice we demonstrate that hyperoxia induces p21 in the absence of p53, suggesting that previous conclusions that p53 does not modify hyperoxic lung injury cannot be extrapolated to p21. In fact, mean survival of p21-deficient mice decreased by 40% and was associated with terminal deoxyribonucleotidyl transferase-mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate-biotin nick-end labeling staining of alveolar debris, indicative of DNA fragmentation and cell death. Ultrastructural analyses revealed that alveolar endothelial and type I epithelial cells died rapidly by necrosis. Although hyperoxia decreased DNA replication in p21-wild-type lungs, it had no effect on replication in p21-deficient lungs. Our findings suggest that p21 protects the lung from oxidative stress, in part, by inhibiting DNA replication and thereby allowing additional time to repair damaged DNA. Our findings have implications for patients suffering from the toxic effects of supplemental oxygen therapies.
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PMID:The cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21 protects the lung from oxidative stress. 1141 35

The beneficial effects of supplemental oxygen delivered to patients suffering from acute respiratory distress is offset by its reduction to genotoxic reactive oxygen species (ROS) that inhibit proliferation and kill pulmonary cells. Cells respond to oxygen-induced damage by expressing the tumor suppressor p53 and the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21(Cip1/WAF1/Sdi1) (p21), which limits proliferation by blocking entry into S phase. Since preventing DNA synthesis during genotoxic stress may enhance survival, the current study examines whether hyperoxia induces p21 through a p53-dependent pathway and whether p21 protects cells from the toxic effects of oxygen. HCT116 colon carcinoma cells and clonal lines lacking p53 or p21were used in this study because they allow direct cytotoxic comparisons between isogenic cells, without complications arising from unknown genetic differences between nonhomologous cell lines. Hyperoxia (95% O2, 5% CO2) increased p53 abundance, phosphorylation of p53 on serine 15, and p21 mRNA and protein in parental HCT116 cells that ceased proliferation. In contrast, p21 was not detected in either p53- or p21-deficient HCT116 cells, which exited the G1 compartment and were arrested in S and G2/M phases during hyperoxia. Trypan blue-dye exclusion revealed that induction of p21 markedly enhanced survival during exposure and colony survival assays showed that p21 enhanced the ability to resume proliferation during recovery in room air. The observation that p53-dependent induction of p21 prevents exit from G1 and promotes survival during hyperoxia is consistent with the importance of limiting DNA replication during genotoxic stress caused by oxygen exposure.
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PMID:p53-dependent induction of p21(Cip1/WAF1/Sdi1) protects against oxygen-induced toxicity. 1156 65

Pre-term neonates and neonates in general exhibit physiological vitamin E deficiency and are at increased risk for the development of acute lung diseases. Apoptosis is a major cause of acute lung damage in alveolar type II cells. In this paper, we evaluated the hypothesis that vitamin E deficiency predisposes alveolar type II cells to apoptosis. Therefore, we measured markers of apoptosis in alveolar type II cells isolated from control rats, vitamin E deficient rats and deficient rats that were re-fed a vitamin E-enriched diet. Bax and cytosolic cytochrome c increased, and the mitochondrial transmembrane potential and Hsp25 expression was reduced in vitamin E deficiency. Furthermore, increased DNA-fragmentation and numbers of early and late apoptotic cells were seen, but caspases 3 and 8 activities and expression of Fas, Bcl-2, Bcl-x and p53 remained unchanged. Vitamin E depletion did not change the GSH/GSSG ratio and the activities of antioxidant enzymes. Thus, vitamin E deficiency may induce a reversible pro-apoptotic response in lung cells and sensitise them for additional insult. In agreement with this hypothesis, we demonstrate that in vivo hyperoxia alone does not induce apoptosis in type II cells of control rats but reversibly increases DNA-fragmentation and numbers of early apoptotic type II cells in vitamin E-depleted cells.
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PMID:Vitamin E deficiency sensitizes alveolar type II cells for apoptosis. 1206 53

Although oxygen is required for normal aerobic respiration, hyperoxia (95% O(2)/5% CO(2)) damages DNA, inhibits proliferation in G1, S and G2 phases of the cell cycle, and induces necrosis. The current study examines whether growth arrest in G1 protects pulmonary epithelial cells from oxidative DNA damage and cell death. Mv1Lu pulmonary adenocarcinoma cells were chosen for studies because hyperoxia inhibits their proliferation in S and G2 phase, while they can be induced to arrest in G1 by altering culture conditions. Hyperoxia inhibited proliferation, increased intracellular redox, and rapidly reduced clonogenic survival. In contrast, Mv1Lu cells treated with transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta1, deprived of serum or grown to confluency, arrested and remained predominantly in G1 even during exposure. Growth arrest in G1 significantly enhanced clonogenic survival by 10-50-fold. Enhanced survival was not due to reduction in the intracellular redox-state of the cells, but instead was associated with reduced DNA strand breaks and p53 expression. Our findings suggest that the protective effects of G1 is mediated not simply by a reduction in intracellular ROS, but rather through an enhanced ability to limit or rapidly recognize and repair damaged DNA.
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PMID:Growth arrest in G1 protects against oxygen-induced DNA damage and cell death. 1220 77

Alveolar cells of the lung are injured and killed when exposed to elevated levels of inspired oxygen. Damaged tissue architecture and pulmonary function is restored during recovery in room air as endothelial and type II epithelial cells proliferate. Although excessive fibroblast proliferation and inflammation occur when abnormal remodeling occurs, genes that regulate repair remain unknown. Our recent observation that hyperoxia inhibits proliferation through induction of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21(Cip1/WAF1/Sdi1), which also facilitates DNA repair, suggested that p21 may participate in remodeling. This hypothesis was tested in p21-wild-type and -deficient mice exposed to 100% FiO(2) and recovered in room air. p21 increased during hyperoxia, remained elevated after 1 day of recovery before returning to unexposed levels. Increased proliferation occurred when p21 expression decreased. In contrast, higher and sustained levels of proliferation, resulting in myofibroblast hyperplasia and monocytic inflammation, occurred in recovered p21-deficient lungs. Cells with DNA strand breaks and expressing p53 were observed in hyperplastic regions suggesting that DNA integrity had not been restored. Normal recovery of endothelial and type II epithelial cells, as assessed by expression of cell-type-specific genes was also delayed in p21-deficient lungs. These results reveal that p21 is required for remodeling the oxygen-injured lung and suggest that failure to limit replication of damaged DNA may lead to cell death, inflammation, and abnormal remodeling. This observation has important implications for therapeutic strategies designed to attenuate long-term chronic lung disease after oxidant injury.
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PMID:Normal remodeling of the oxygen-injured lung requires the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21(Cip1/WAF1/Sdi1). 1236 11

Reactive oxygen species produced during hyperoxia damage DNA, inhibit proliferation in G1- through p53-dependent activation of p21(Cip1/WAF1/Sdi1), and kill cells. Because checkpoint activation protects cells from genotoxic stress, we investigated cell proliferation and survival of the murine type II epithelial cell line MLE15 during hyperoxia. These cells were chosen for study because they express Simian large and small-T antigens, which transform cells in part by disrupting the p53-dependent G1 checkpoint. Cell counts, 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine labeling, and flow cytometry revealed that hyperoxia slowed cell cycle progression after one replication, resulting in a pronounced G2 arrest by 72 h. Addition of caffeine, which inactivates the G2 checkpoint, diminished the percentage of hyperoxic cells in G2 and increased the percentage in sub-G1 and G1. Abrogation of the G2 checkpoint was associated with enhanced oxygen-induced DNA strand breaks and cell death. Caffeine did not affect DNA integrity or viability of cells exposed to room air. Similarly, caffeine abrogated the G2 checkpoint in hyperoxic A549 epithelial cells and enhanced oxygen-induced toxicity. These data indicate that hyperoxia rapidly inhibits proliferation after one cell cycle and that the G2 checkpoint is critical for limiting DNA damage and cell death.
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PMID:Activation of the G2 cell cycle checkpoint enhances survival of epithelial cells exposed to hyperoxia. 1238 47

Hyperoxia induces growth arrest, apoptosis, necrosis, and morphological changes (spreading and adhesion) in various types of cells. The mechanism of hyperoxia-induced cell growth arrest has not been well elucidated, especially in macrophages. One possible mechanism is a role of cell adhesion in hyperoxia-induced cell cycle arrest. To evaluate this finding, macrophages were cultured in normoxia (21% O2) or hyperoxia (95% O2) in adhesion or low adhesion conditions. Incubation of macrophages in hyperoxia induced cell cycle arrest. The hyperoxia-induced cell cycle arrest was prevented by low adhesion conditions. To evaluate pathways potentially involved in hyperoxia-induced growth arrest, we measured extracellular regulated kinase and retinoblastoma protein activation and p21Cip1 and p53 accumulation. Hyperoxia strongly induced activation of extracellular regulated kinase and retinoblastoma protein as well as up-regulation of p21Cip1. These effects of hyperoxia were attenuated under low adhesion conditions, suggesting a role for integrin-dependent signaling. The induction of p21Cip1 and activation of retinoblastoma protein occurred via a p53-independent mechanism. These results suggest that adhesion-dependent pathways are required for hyperoxia-induced cell cycle arrest in macrophages.
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PMID:Hyperoxia induces macrophage cell cycle arrest by adhesion-dependent induction of p21Cip1 and activation of the retinoblastoma protein. 1284


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