| Literature DB >> 27864139 |
Amélia Feliciano1, Fátima Vaz2, Vukosava M Torres2, Cristina Valentim-Coelho3, Rita Silva3, Vesna Prosinecki3, Bruno M Alexandre3, Ana S Carvalho4, Rune Matthiesen4, Atul Malhotra5, Paula Pinto6, Cristina Bárbara6, Deborah Penque7.
Abstract
We have examined the effects of Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA) on red blood cell (RBC) proteome variation at evening/morning day time to uncover new insights into OSA-induced RBC dysfunction that may lead to OSA manifestations. Dysregulated proteins mainly fall in the group of catalytic enzymes, stress response and redox regulators such as peroxiredoxin 2 (PRDX2). Validation assays confirmed that at morning the monomeric/dimeric forms of PRDX2 were more overoxidized in OSA RBC compared to evening samples. Six month of positive airway pressure (PAP) treatment decreased this overoxidation and generated multimeric overoxidized forms associated with chaperone/transduction signaling activity of PRDX2. Morning levels of overoxidized PRDX2 correlated with polysomnographic (PSG)-arousal index and metabolic parameters whereas the evening level of disulfide-linked dimer (associated with peroxidase activity of PRDX2) correlated with PSG parameters. After treatment, morning overoxidized multimer of PRDX2 negatively correlated with fasting glucose and dopamine levels. Overall, these data point toward severe oxidative stress and altered antioxidant homeostasis in OSA RBC occurring mainly at morning time but with consequences till evening. The beneficial effect of PAP involves modulation of the redox/oligomeric state of PRDX2, whose mechanism and associated chaperone/transduction signaling functions deserves further investigation. RBC PRDX2 is a promising candidate biomarker for OSA severity and treatment monitoring, warranting further investigation and validation.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; Obstructive sleep apnea; Peroxiredeoxin-2; Red blood cells
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27864139 PMCID: PMC5429963 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbadis.2016.11.019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Basis Dis ISSN: 0925-4439 Impact factor: 5.187