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Query: UNIPROT:P04179 (
MnSOD
)
2,777
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The sensitivity of copper,
zinc
(CuZn)- and manganese (Mn)-superoxide dismutase (SOD) to exogenous estradiol benzoate (EB) was investigated in Wistar rats during postnatal brain development. Enzyme activities were measured in samples prepared from brains of rats of both sexes and various ages between 0 and 75 days, treated sc with 0.5 micro g EB/100 g body weight in 0.1 ml olive oil/100 g body weight, 48 and 24 h before sacrifice. In females, EB treatment stimulated
MnSOD
activity on days 0 (66.1%), 8 (72.7%) and 15 (81.7%). In males, the stimulatory effect of EB on
MnSOD
activity on day 0 (113.6%) disappeared on day 8 and on days 15 and 45 it became inhibitory (40.3 and 30.5%, respectively). EB had no effect on the other age groups. The stimulatory effect of EB on CuZnSOD activity in newborn females (51.8%) changed to an inhibitory effect on day 8 (38.4%) and disappeared by day 45 when inhibition was detected again (48.7%). In males, the inhibitory effect on this enzyme was observed on days 0 (45.0%) and 15 (28.9%), and then disappeared until day 60 when a stimulatory effect was observed (38.4%). EB treatment had no effect on the other age groups. The sensitivity of
MnSOD
to estradiol differed significantly between sexes during the neonatal and prepubertal period, whereas it followed a similar pattern thereafter. The sensitivity of CuZnSOD to estradiol differed significantly between sexes during most of the study period. Regression analysis showed that the sensitivity of
MnSOD
to this estrogen tended to decrease similarly in both sexes, whereas the sensitivity of CuZnSOD showed a significantly different opposite tendency in female and male rats. These are the first reports indicating hormonal modulation of antioxidant enzyme activities related to the developmental process.
...
PMID:The modulatory effect of estradiol benzoate on superoxide dismutase activity in the developing rat brain. 1271 76
Oxidative stress plays a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis and can be effectively influenced by radical scavenging enzyme activity and expression. The vasoprotective effects of estrogens may be related to antioxidative properties. Therefore, effects of 17beta-estradiol on production of reactive oxygen species and radical scavenging enzymes were investigated. 17beta-estradiol diminished angiotensin II-induced free radical production in vascular smooth muscle cells (DCF fluorescence laser microscopy). 17beta-estradiol time- and concentration-dependently upregulated manganese (
MnSOD
) and extracellular superoxide dismutase (ecSOD) expression (Northern and Western blotting) and enzyme activity (photometric assay). Nuclear run-on assays demonstrated that 17beta-estradiol increases
MnSOD
and ecSOD transcription rate. Half-life of
MnSOD
mRNA was not influenced, whereas ecSOD mRNA was stabilized by estrogen. Copper-
zinc
SOD, glutathione-peroxidase, and catalase were not affected by estrogen. Estrogen deficiency in ovariectomized mice induced a downregulation of ecSOD and
MnSOD
expression, which was associated with increased production of vascular free radicals and prevented by estrogen replacement or treatment with PEG-SOD. In humans, increased estrogen levels led to enhanced ecSOD and
MnSOD
expression in circulating monocytes. Estrogen acts antioxidative at least to some extent via stimulation of
MnSOD
and ecSOD expression and activity, which may contribute to its vasoprotective effects.
...
PMID:Modulation of antioxidant enzyme expression and function by estrogen. 1281 84
Many individuals with cardiovascular diseases undergo physical conditioning with or without medication. Therefore, this study investigated the interaction of exercise training and chronic nitroglycerin treatment on blood pressure (BP) and changes in cardiac nitric oxide (NO) and antioxidants in rats. Fisher 344 rats were divided into four groups treated as: (1) sedentary control, (2) exercise training for 8 weeks, (3) nitroglycerin (15 mg/kg, s.c. for 8 weeks), and (4) training+nitroglycerin for 8 weeks. Respiratory exchange ratio (RER), BP, and heart rate (HR) were monitored weekly for 8 weeks. The animals were sacrificed 24 h after last treatments, hearts isolated, and analyzed. Physical conditioning significantly increased RER, cardiac NO levels, and endothelial eNOS protein expression. Training significantly enhanced cardiac glutathione (GSH) levels, GSH/GSSG ratio, and the up-regulation of cardiac copper/
zinc
-superoxide dismutase (CuZn-SOD), manganese (Mn)-SOD, catalase (CAT), glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px) activities, and protein expression. Training also caused depletion of cardiac malondialdehyde (MDA) and protein carbonyls with a significant increase in RER without any change in BP and HR. Chronic nitroglycerin administration significantly increased cardiac NO levels and eNOS protein expression. Nitroglycerin administration significantly enhanced cardiac
Mn-SOD
, CAT, and GST activities, and protein expression with decreased MDA levels and BP. Interaction of training and chronic nitroglycerin treatment increased cardiac NO levels with enhanced eNOS and iNOS protein expressions, GSH/GSSG ratio, and the up-regulation of antioxidant enzymes. This interaction normalized BP and HR and increased RER. The data suggest that the interaction of physical training and chronic nitroglycerin treatment resulted in the maintenance of BP and RER by up-regulating the antioxidants and NO levels and by reducing the oxidative stress in the rat heart.
...
PMID:Interaction of physical training and chronic nitroglycerin treatment on blood pressure, nitric oxide, and oxidants/antioxidants in the rat heart. 1286 Apr 43
Mucosal tissue damage and dysfunction in chronic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) are partly caused by an enduring exposure to excessive amounts of reactive oxygen metabolites (ROMs). Although the three human isoforms of superoxide dismutase (SOD), copper/
zinc
(Cu/Zn)-SOD, manganese (Mn)-SOD, and extracellular (EC)-SOD, form the primary endogenous defence against ROMs, their expression levels and cellular localization in IBD mucosa are largely unknown. The present study used enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs), spectrophotometric activity assays, and immunohistochemistry to evaluate the protein concentration, enzymatic activity, and distribution of Cu/Zn-, Mn-, and EC-SOD in paired inflamed and non-inflamed mucosal resection specimens of patients with Crohn's disease (CD) or ulcerative colitis (UC) and compared these with the levels obtained in normal control mucosa. Gut mucosal SOD isoform expression was found to be differentially affected in IBD patients, without major differences between CD and UC. A marked step-wise increase in
Mn-SOD
protein levels was observed in non-inflamed and inflamed IBD mucosae, whereas the Cu/Zn-SOD content decreased with inflammation. EC-SOD was only found in low amounts, which tended to be decreased in IBD patients. Immunohistochemical evaluation confirmed these observations.
Mn-SOD
and Cu/Zn-SOD were both predominantly expressed in intestinal epithelial cells and the percentage of epithelial cells positive for
Mn-SOD
was considerably increased in IBD, whereas epithelial Cu/Zn-SOD expression was much less affected. Within the lamina propria, SOD expression was much lower. Cu/Zn-SOD and
Mn-SOD
were prominently present in neutrophils and macrophages, and EC-SOD was mainly localized in small vessels, stromal cells, and neutrophils. The percentage of lamina propria cells positive for Cu/Zn-, Mn-, or EC-SOD was not affected by inflammation. Enzyme activity measurements showed consistent results for Cu/Zn-SOD and EC-SOD, but the activity of
Mn-SOD
did not concordantly increase with the immunological assessments, which may indicate that a proportion of the
Mn-SOD
in IBD is present in an enzymatically inactive form. This study reveals remarkable changes in the expression levels of the three SOD isoforms in IBD, particularly in the epithelium. Disturbances in the carefully orchestrated mucosal antioxidant cascade may contribute to the induction and perpetuation of intestinal inflammation in IBD, and may have important implications for the development of antioxidant treatment of IBD patients.
...
PMID:Differential mucosal expression of three superoxide dismutase isoforms in inflammatory bowel disease. 1295 12
A diet low in copper results in increased levels of
MnSOD
(manganese superoxide dismutase), a critical antioxidative enzyme conferring protection against oxidative stress, in rat liver mitochondria. The mechanism for this was investigated using cultured HepG2 cells, a human hepatocellular carcinoma-derived line.
MnSOD
activity increased 5-7-fold during incubation in a medium supplemented with metal-depleted fetal bovine serum, with a corresponding elevation of its mRNA levels. Metal depletion also decreased CuZnSOD and glutathione peroxidase levels to approx. 70-80% of baseline. When
zinc
ions were added to the medium at micromolar levels,
MnSOD
accumulation was suppressed; however, copper ions had essentially no effect on
MnSOD
expression. Since the intracellular redox status was shifted to a more oxidized state by metal depletion, we examined the DNA-binding activity of NF-kappaB (nuclear factor-kappaB), an oxidative stress-sensitive transactivating factor that plays a primary role in
MnSOD
induction. A gel shift assay indicated that the DNA-binding activity of NF-kappaB was increased in cells maintained in metal-depleted culture, suggesting the involvement of the transactivating function of NF-kappaB in this induction. This was further supported by the observation that curcumin suppressed both the DNA-binding activity of NF-kappaB and the induction of
MnSOD
mRNA in cells cultivated under metal-depleted conditions. These results suggest that the level of
zinc
, rather than copper, is a critical regulatory factor in
MnSOD
expression. It is possible that a deficiency of
zinc
in the low-copper diet may be primarily involved in
MnSOD
induction.
...
PMID:Accumulation of manganese superoxide dismutase under metal-depleted conditions: proposed role for zinc ions in cellular redox balance. 1453 33
Many cardiac patients undergo exercise conditioning with or without medication. Therefore, we investigated the interaction of exercise training and chronic nitroglycerin treatment on blood pressure (BP), aortic nitric oxide (NO), oxidants and antioxidants in rats. Fisher 344 rats were divided into four groups and treated as follows: (1) sedentary control, (2) exercise training (ET) for 8 weeks, (3) nitroglycerin (15 mg/kg, s.c. for 8 weeks) and (4) ET+nitroglycerin. BP was monitored with tail-cuff method. The animals were sacrificed 24 h after the last treatments and thoracic aorta was isolated and analyzed. Exercise training on treadmill for 8 weeks significantly increased respiratory exchange ratio (RER), aortic NO levels, and endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) protein expression. Training significantly enhanced aortic glutathione (GSH), reduced to oxidized glutathione (GSH/GSSG) ratio, copper/
zinc
-superoxide dismutase (CuZn-SOD),
Mn-SOD
, catalase (CAT), glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px) glutathione disulfide reductase (GR) activities and protein expressions. Training significantly depleted aortic malondialdehyde (MDA) and protein carbonyls without change in BP. Nitroglycerin administration for 8 weeks significantly increased aortic NO levels and eNOS protein expression. Nitroglycerin significantly enhanced aortic
Mn-SOD
, CAT, GR and glutathione-S-transferase (GST) activities and protein expressions with decreased MDA levels, protein carbonyls and BP. Interaction of training and nitroglycerin treatment significantly increased aortic NO levels, eNOS protein expression, GSH/GSSG ratio, antioxidant enzymes and normalized BP. The data suggest that the interaction of training and nitroglycerin maintained BP by up-regulating the aortic NO and antioxidants and reducing the oxidative stress in rats.
...
PMID:Interaction of regular exercise and chronic nitroglycerin treatment on blood pressure and rat aortic antioxidants. 1473 77
Calcium deficiency is considered to increase intracellular calcium level; thus the aim of the current study was to elucidate whether dietary calcium restriction enhanced exercise-induced oxidative stress in rat diaphragm. Twenty male Wistar rats were randomly assigned to either a control group or a group subjected to 1 mo of calcium restriction. In addition, each group was subsequently subdivided into rested or acutely exercised group. Dietary calcium restriction significantly (P < 0.05) upregulated the activities of manganese-superoxide dismutase (Mn-SOD), copper-
zinc
-superoxide dismutase (Cu-Zn-SOD), and glutathione peroxidase (Gpx) but not catalase. Acute exercise, in addition to calcium restriction, decreased both SOD isoenzymes in the diaphragm of calcium-restricted rats (P < 0.05). On the other hand, calcium restriction resulted in increased Gpx mRNA expression (P < 0.05). In control rats, acute exercise significantly (P < 0.05) increased the expressions of both SOD mRNAs, whereas in the calcium-restricted rats, it increased that of Mn-
SOD mRNA
(P < 0.05) but decreased that of Gpx mRNA (P < 0.05). Furthermore, reactive carbonyl derivative, a marker of protein oxidation, was significantly greater in the calcium-restricted rats than in the control rats after acute exercise (P < 0.05). The results suggest that antioxidant enzymes in rat diaphragm were upregulated in response to an increased oxidative stress by dietary calcium restriction but that upregulation is not enough to cope with exercise-induced further increase of oxidative stress.
...
PMID:Effects of dietary calcium restriction and acute exercise on the antioxidant enzyme system and oxidative stress in rat diaphragm. 1476 36
Carboplatin, a second-generation platinum-containing anti-cancer drug, is currently being used against human cancers. High-dose carboplatin chemotherapy can cause renal tubular injury in cancer patients. We have shown a dose-dependent nephrotoxicity of carboplatin in a rat model. However, the time response of carboplatin-induced renal injury has not been explored. This study investigated the time response of carboplatin-induced nephrotoxicity in rat. Male Wistar rats (250-300 g) were divided into two groups of 30 animals each and treated as follows: (1) control (saline, intraperitoneally) and (2) carboplatin (256 mg kg(-1), intraperitoneally). The animals (n = 6) from each group were sacrificed 1-5 days after treatment. The blood and kidneys were isolated and analyzed. Plasma creatinine, blood urea nitrogen (BUN), and blood urea levels were increased significantly in response to carboplatin in a time-dependent manner, indicating potential nephrotoxicity. Carboplatin time-dependently increased the renal platinum concentration, renal xanthine oxidase activity, increased membrane lipid peroxidation (MDA) concentration, while ratio of reduced-to-oxidized glutathione (GSH/GSSG) depleted significantly, indicating oxidative renal injury. Renal anti-oxidant enzymes, such as cytosolic copper/
zinc
-superoxide dismutase (CuZn-SOD) and mitochondrial manganese (Mn)-SOD, catalase (CAT), and glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px) activities were decreased significantly due to carboplatin 3-5 days post-treatment. The protein expressions of renal CuZn-SOD and
Mn-SOD
significantly depleted 3-5 days after carboplatin administration, indicating decline in de novo synthesis of enzyme proteins. The data suggested that carboplatin caused time-dependent oxidative renal injury, as evidenced by renal anti-oxidant depletion, enhanced lipid peroxidation, platinum content, plasma creatinine BUN, and blood urea levels in rats.
...
PMID:Time response of carboplatin-induced nephrotoxicity in rats. 1522 73
This study investigates the role of extracellular SOD (EC-SOD), the major extracellular antioxidant enzyme, in skeletal muscle ischemia and reperfusion (I/R) injury. Pedicled cremaster muscle flaps from homozygous EC-SOD knockout (EC-SOD-/-) and wild-type (WT) mice were subjected to 4.5-h ischemia and 90-min reperfusion followed by functional and molecular analyses. Our results revealed that EC-SOD-/- mice showed significantly profound I/R injury compared with WT littermates. In particular, there was a delayed and incomplete recovery of arterial spasm and blood flow during reperfusion, and more severe acute inflammatory reaction and muscle damage were noted in EC-SOD-/- mice. After 90-min reperfusion, intracellular SOD [copper- and
zinc
-containing SOD (CuZn-SOD) and manganese-containing (
Mn-SOD
)] mRNA levels decreased similarly in both groups. EC-
SOD mRNA
levels increased in WT mice, whereas EC-
SOD mRNA
was undetectable, as expected, in EC-SOD-/- mice. In both groups of animals, CuZn-SOD protein levels decreased and
Mn-SOD
protein levels remained unchanged. EC-SOD protein levels decreased in WT mice. Histological analysis showed diffuse edema and inflammation around muscle fibers, which was more pronounced in EC-SOD-/- mice. In conclusion, our data suggest that EC-SOD plays an important role in the protection from skeletal muscle I/R injury caused by excessive generation of reactive oxygen species.
...
PMID:Skeletal muscle reperfusion injury is enhanced in extracellular superoxide dismutase knockout mouse. 1577 74
Combined radiotherapy and chemotherapy have represented major advance in the therapeutic management of cancer therapy. Anthracycline antineoplastic agents are limited by a high incidence of severe and usually irreversible cardiac toxicity, the cause of which remains controversial. When the primary cardiomyocytes isolated from neonatal rats were preirradiated by gamma-ray, the cells were highly resistant to adriamycin-induced apoptosis. This study shows that irradiation inhibited apoptosis by enhancing Bcl-2, attenuating Bax induction, and preventing collapse of mitochondrial membrane potential (delta psi), cytochrome c release into cytoplasm and caspase-3, -6 and -9 activations. In addition, the preirradiation stimulated the activity of manganese-superoxide dismutase (Mn-SOD) and the expression of Mn-
SOD mRNA
and protein. Adriamycin decreased Mn-SOD activity but did not change the activity of copper/
zinc
(Cu/Zn)-SOD under either pre- or nonirradiated condition. Phosphothioate-linked antisense against Mn-SOD, which specifically knocked down the activity of Mn-SOD but not that of Cu/Zn-SOD, reversed irradiation-induced protective effect in adriamycin-exposed cardiomyocytes. These data suggest that the irradiation-induced expression of Mn-SOD plays an important role in irradiation-mediated protection in adriamycin-exposed rat ventricular cardiomyocytes.
...
PMID:Radiation protects adriamycin-induced apoptosis. 1611 6
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