| Literature DB >> 22919381 |
Damian G Deavall1, Elizabeth A Martin, Judith M Horner, Ruth Roberts.
Abstract
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are a byproduct of normal metabolism and have roles in cell signaling and homeostasis. Species include oxygen radicals and reactive nonradicals. Mechanisms exist that regulate cellular levels of ROS, as their reactive nature may otherwise cause damage to key cellular components including DNA, protein, and lipid. When the cellular antioxidant capacity is exceeded, oxidative stress can result. Pleiotropic deleterious effects of oxidative stress are observed in numerous disease states and are also implicated in a variety of drug-induced toxicities. In this paper, we examine the nature of ROS-induced damage on key cellular targets of oxidative stress. We also review evidence implicating ROS in clinically relevant, drug-related side effects including doxorubicin-induced cardiac damage, azidothymidine-induced myopathy, and cisplatin-induced ototoxicity.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22919381 PMCID: PMC3420138 DOI: 10.1155/2012/645460
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Toxicol ISSN: 1687-8191
Figure 1Reactive oxygen species: main forms and sources. Reactive oxygen species occur mainly as byproducts of the mitochondrial respiratory chain but can also originate from the activities of NADPH and lipoxygenase. Once released, reactive oxygen species can react with NO leading to the generation of reactive nitrogen species. Molecules with unpaired electron free radicals are shown in red.
Figure 2The main effects of drug-induced oxidative stress in cells. Increases in intracellular ROS may result in DNA damage, oxidation of lipids and proteins. MAP kinase signaling pathways are key mediators of the cellular response.
Examples of toxicities associated with drug-induced oxidative stress.
| Therapeutic class | Drug | Example toxicities | Evidence for oxidative stress | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antineoplastic (anthracycline) | Doxorubicin | Cardiac toxicity | Reduction of doxorubicin to free radical increases ROS in cardiomyocytes. Lipid peroxidation, mitochondrial dysfunction, apoptosis | [ |
| Antiretroviral | AZT | Skeletal myopathy, cardiac toxicity | Increased ROS and NOS (peroxide and peroxynitrate). Overexpression of superoxidase dismutase/catalase protects against toxicity, apoptosis | [ |
| Anti-inflammatory | Diclofenac | Nephrotoxicity, hepatotoxicity | Oxidative stress generated by a cation radical or redox cycling of intermediates derived from hydroxylation. Multifactorial perturbations in mitochondrial dysfunction | [ |
| Analgesia | Paracetamol | Hepatotoxicity | Formation of reactive metabolite, depletion of glutathione, activation of proapoptotic proteins. Mitochondrial dysfunction, inflammation | [ |
| Antineoplastic (platinum) | Cisplatin | Nephrotoxicity, ototoxicity | Increases in superoxide anion, hydrogen peroxide, and hydroxyl radical. Depletion of antioxidants GSH-peroxidase and GSH-reductase. Mitochondrial dysfunction, apoptosis | [ |
| Antipsychotic | Chlorpromazine | Dermal toxicity (due to phototoxicity) | Generation of singlet oxygen and superoxide in response to UVA/B irradiation | [ |
Figure 3Molecular and cellular events by which oxidative stress in response to Dox, AZT, and cisplatin may result in toxicity. Dox, AZT, and cisplatin accumulation in cells may result in elevations in intracellular ROS. Dox may accumulate in cardiac cells by association with cardiolipin and generate ROS via reduction of molecular oxygen by the semiquinone free radical or by an iron II-Dox radical. Cisplatin may be transported into cells via the OCT transporters (e.g., in renal tubule cells) and elevate ROS levels via induction of NOXs. At the molecular level, ROS damage amino acids, lipid, and DNA. Mitochondrial dysfunction and associated alterations in energetics, together with effects on survival/apoptotic signaling cascades may lead to a proapoptotic response. These common mechanisms may be key to Dox-dependent cardiotoxicity, AZT-dependent skeletal myopathy, and cisplatin-dependent nephrotoxicity and ototoxicity described further in Section 3.