Literature DB >> 17223613

The role of NADPH oxidase in carotid body arterial chemoreceptors.

B Dinger1, L He, J Chen, X Liu, C Gonzalez, A Obeso, K Sanders, J Hoidal, L Stensaas, S Fidone.   

Abstract

O(2)-sensing in the carotid body occurs in neuroectoderm-derived type I glomus cells where hypoxia elicits a complex chemotransduction cascade involving membrane depolarization, Ca(2+) entry and the release of excitatory neurotransmitters. Efforts to understand the exquisite O(2)-sensitivity of these cells currently focus on the coupling between local P(O2) and the open-closed state of K(+)-channels. Amongst multiple competing hypotheses is the notion that K(+)-channel activity is mediated by a phagocytic-like multisubunit enzyme, NADPH oxidase, which produces reactive oxygen species (ROS) in proportion to the prevailing P(O2). In O(2)-sensitive cells of lung neuroepithelial bodies (NEB), multiple studies confirm that ROS levels decrease in hypoxia, and that E(M) and K(+)-channel activity are indeed controlled by ROS produced by NADPH oxidase. However, recent studies in our laboratories suggest that ROS generated by a non-phagocyte isoform of the oxidase are important contributors to chemotransduction, but that their role in type I cells differs fundamentally from the mechanism utilized by NEB chemoreceptors. Data indicate that in response to hypoxia, NADPH oxidase activity is increased in type I cells, and further, that increased ROS levels generated in response to low-O(2) facilitate cell repolarization via specific subsets of K(+)-channels.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17223613      PMCID: PMC2570203          DOI: 10.1016/j.resp.2006.12.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Respir Physiol Neurobiol        ISSN: 1569-9048            Impact factor:   1.931


  69 in total

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3.  Effect of p47phox gene deletion on ROS production and oxygen sensing in mouse carotid body chemoreceptor cells.

Authors:  L He; B Dinger; K Sanders; J Hoidal; A Obeso; L Stensaas; S Fidone; C Gonzalez
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4.  Modulation of chronic hypoxia-induced chemoreceptor hypersensitivity by NADPH oxidase subunits in rat carotid body.

Authors:  L He; X Liu; J Chen; B Dinger; L Stensaas; S Fidone
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Review 6.  NADPH oxidase activity is necessary for acute intermittent hypoxia-induced phrenic long-term facilitation.

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Review 7.  Reactive oxygen species and respiratory plasticity following intermittent hypoxia.

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8.  Exposure to cyclic intermittent hypoxia increases expression of functional NMDA receptors in the rat carotid body.

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