| Literature DB >> 18949082 |
Assumpção C R1, Brunini T M C, Matsuura C, Resende A C, Mendes-Ribeiro A C.
Abstract
The discovery of the physiological roles of nitric oxide has revolutionized the understanding of regulation of vascular tone, platelet adhesion and aggregation, and immune activation. Perhaps the most intriguing aspect of nitric oxide (NO) is that it is a gas that, in the absence of receptors, can regulate both normal physiological events and mediate cytotoxicity under pathological conditions. NO is produced from L-arginine by NO synthases (NOS), yielding L-citrulline and NO. The regulation of L-arginine pathway activity occurs at the level of NO production. The metabolic syndrome is a cluster of insulin resistance, elevated blood pressure, and atherogenic dyslipidemia, a common basis of cardiovascular disease. It occurs in genetically susceptible individuals with environmental influences and has serious economic and social consequences. Pharmacological and non-pharmacological therapies should be individualized and targeted to normalize its alterations of blood pressure, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides and glucose values. Despite the increasing prevalence of the metabolic syndrome in the last decades, there has been little progress in the understanding of the precise mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of this syndrome and its complications. Emerging evidence is available that NO, inflammation and oxidative stress play important roles in the physiopathology of this syndrome. This review summarizes and evaluates the participation of the L-arginine-NO pathway and oxidative stress in the physiopathology of the metabolic syndrome and cardiovascular events at the systemic level, as well as the effects of exercise on this syndrome.Entities:
Keywords: L-arginine; Nitric oxide; blood cells; endothelium.; metabolic syndrome
Year: 2008 PMID: 18949082 PMCID: PMC2570556 DOI: 10.2174/1874091X00802010108
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Biochem J ISSN: 1874-091X
The National Cholesterol Education Program's Adult Treatment Panel III (NCEP: ATP III , 2001)
| NCEP: ATP III,2001 |
| 3 or more of the following: |
| Central obesity: waist circumference >102 cm (male), >88 cm (female) |
| Hypertriglyceridaemia: triglycerides ≥1·7 mmol/L |
| Low HDL cholesterol: <1·0 mmol/L (male), <1·3 mmol/L (female) |
| Hypertension: blood pressure ≥130/85 mm Hg or medication |
| Fasting plasma glucose ≥6·1 mmol/L |
Summary of the Features of the Three NOS Isoforms
| neurones | macrophages | Endothelium | |
| 160 | 130 | 133 | |
| 12p24.2 | 17cen-q12 | 7q35-36 | |
| Neuronal messenger | Immunocytotoxicity | Relaxation of VSM* | |
| pmoles | nmoles | pmoles | |
| Constitutive Up-regulated by sex hormones, nerve and brain injury | Not normally present Expression induced by cytokines and endotoxin | Constitutive Up-regulated by sex hormones and shear stress |
*VSM=vascular smooth muscle.
Refs. [3, 8-10, 12].