| Literature DB >> 27270647 |
Anna V Kudryavtseva1,2, George S Krasnov1, Alexey A Dmitriev1, Boris Y Alekseev2, Olga L Kardymon1, Asiya F Sadritdinova1,2, Maria S Fedorova1, Anatoly V Pokrovsky3, Nataliya V Melnikova1, Andrey D Kaprin2, Alexey A Moskalev1,4, Anastasiya V Snezhkina1.
Abstract
Aging and cancer are the most important issues to research. The population in the world is growing older, and the incidence of cancer increases with age. There is no doubt about the linkage between aging and cancer. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying this association are still unknown. Several lines of evidence suggest that the oxidative stress as a cause and/or consequence of the mitochondrial dysfunction is one of the main drivers of these processes. Increasing ROS levels and products of the oxidative stress, which occur in aging and age-related disorders, were also found in cancer. This review focuses on the similarities between ageing-associated and cancer-associated oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction as their common phenotype.Entities:
Keywords: Gerotarget; ROS; aging; cancer; mitochondrial dysfunction; oxidative stress
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27270647 PMCID: PMC5216692 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.9821
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Major intracellular sources of reactive oxygen species (ROS)
| Reactive oxygen species | Intracellular sources | Compartment |
|---|---|---|
| Singlet oxygen (O2) | Fenton reaction | Mitochondria |
| Hydroxyl radical (OH•) | Proton-catalyzed decomposition of peroxynitrite | Mitochondria |
| Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) | Superoxide dismutase (SOD)-mediated reaction | Mitochondria |
| Superoxide anion (O2•−) | Fenton reaction | Mitochondria |
| Hypochlorous acid (HOCL) and related species (HOBr, HOI, and HOSCN) | Eosinophil peroxidase (EPX)-mediated reaction (within eosinophil granulocytes) | Cytosol |
| Hydroxyl ion (OH-) | Fenton reaction | Mitochondria |
| Peroxide (O2•2−) | Peroxide is unstable molecule. Hydrogen peroxide is more stable one that is formed as described above. | Mitochondria |
| Ozone (O3) | Ozone (O3) is unstable molecule generated during antibody catalyzed oxidation of H2O to H2O2 | Cytosol |
| Nitric oxide radical (NO•) | Nitric oxide synthases (NOS)-mediated nitrite (NO2-) reduction | Mitochondria |
| Peroxynitrite (ONOO-) | Fenton reaction | Mitochondria |
| Peroxyl radical (ROO•/RCOO•) (also denoted Lypid peroxyl radical (LOO•)) | Lipid peroxidation chain reactions | Cytosol |
| Hydroperoxy radical (HOO•) | Fenton reaction | Mitochondria |
| Organic hydroperoxide (ROOH/RCOOH) | Lipoxygenase-mediated reaction | Cytosol |
| Organic radicals (R•, RO•, R-S•) | Hydroperoxide (ROOH) decomposition induced by heat or radiation | Cytosol |
| Carbonate Radical (CO3●-) | The reaction between peroxynitrite and CO2 | Mitochondria |
Figure 1Generation of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (mtROS)
Complex I - NADH dehydrogenase, II - Succinate dehydrogenase, III - bc1 complex, IV - Cytochrome C oxidase, V - ATP synthase, Q - Ubiquinone, Cyt C - Cytochrome C, Cyclo D - Cyclophilin D, mPTP - Mitochondrial permeability transition pore, SOD - Superoxide dismutase, GPxs - Glutathione peroxidase, TPx - Thioredoxin peroxidase. See text for details.
Figure 2Scheme of lipid peroxidation chain reaction
Lipid peroxidation chain reactions initiated by free radicals consists of three major steps (initiation, propagation, and termination), which are marked by green, blue, and red frames, respectively. LH - Lipid molecule, L• - Lipid radical, LOOH - Lipid hydroperoxide, LOO• - Lipid peroxyl radical, LO• - Lipid alhoxyl radical, LOOL - Peroxide bridged dimer, L-L - Fatty acid dimer, OH• - hydroxyl radical, HO2• - perhydroxyl radical. See text for details.
Figure 3Oxidative stress in aging and cancer: signaling pathways
See text for details.
Figure 4Schematic diagram illustrating the harmful effects of ROS on the cellular processes and subsequent outcomes