| Literature DB >> 28119569 |
Radhika Rastogi1, Xiaokun Geng2, Fengwu Li3, Yuchuan Ding4.
Abstract
Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NAPDH) oxidase (NOX) is an enzyme complex with the sole function of producing superoxide anion and reactive oxygen species (ROS) at the expense of NADPH. Vital to the immune system as well as cellular signaling, NOX is also involved in the pathologies of a wide variety of disease states. Particularly, it is an integral player in many neurological diseases, including stroke, TBI, and neurodegenerative diseases. Pathologically, NOX produces an excessive amount of ROS that exceed the body's antioxidant ability to neutralize them, leading to oxidative stress and aberrant signaling. This prevalence makes it an attractive therapeutic target and as such, NOX inhibitors have been studied and developed to counter NOX's deleterious effects. However, recent studies of NOX have created a better understanding of the NOX complex. Comprised of independent cytosolic subunits, p47-phox, p67-phox, p40-phox and Rac, and membrane subunits, gp91-phox and p22-phox, the NOX complex requires a unique activation process through subunit interaction. Of these subunits, p47-phox plays the most important role in activation, binding and translocating the cytosolic subunits to the membrane and anchoring to p22-phox to organize the complex for NOX activation and function. Moreover, these interactions, particularly that between p47-phox and p22-phox, are dependent on phosphorylation initiated by upstream processes involving protein kinase C (PKC). This review will look at these interactions between subunits and with PKC. It will focus on the interaction involving p47-phox with p22-phox, key in bringing the cytosolic subunits to the membrane. Furthermore, the implication of these interactions as a target for NOX inhibitors such as apocynin will be discussed as a potential avenue for further investigation, in order to develop more specific NOX inhibitors based on the inhibition of NOX assembly and activation.Entities:
Keywords: NAPDH oxidase; NOX inhibitors; PKC; TBI; ischemia/reperfusion; neurodegenerative disease; reactive oxygen species; stroke
Year: 2017 PMID: 28119569 PMCID: PMC5222855 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2016.00301
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
Figure 1The nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NAPDH) oxidase (NOX) complex and its subunits are shown above with details pertaining to its activation sequence. The NOX complex consists of two membrane subunits (gp91-phox, or its homologs, and p22-phox) that form the catalytic core of NOX, several cytosolic subunits (p47-phox, p67-phox, p40-phox (not shown)), and the G-protein Rac, which are required for assembly and activation. In NOX activation, stimuli induce Protein Kinase C (PKC) activation, which phosphorylates p47-phox, already complexed to p67-phox, and reveals the p47-phox SH3 domain. The cytosolic subunits then translocate to the membrane due to interactions between the SH3 domains of p47-phox with the proline rich region of p22-phox. Rac independently translocates to the complex to activate NOX. When activated, NOX produces superoxide ion through a redox reaction with molecular oxygen and NADPH. The latter is produced from glucose, which enters the cell and as an intermediate of glycolysis, produces glucose-6-phosphate (G-6-P). This substrate may continue through glycolysis or may be shunted to the hexose monophosphate shunt to produce NADPH by reducing NADP+. The remaining carbon backbone is shunted back to the glycolytic process downstream of G-6-P to fructose-6-phosphate (F-6-P) and then enters the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle and electron transport chain to produce energy as adenosine triphosphate (ATP) in mitochondria. However, the NADPH produced, with molecular oxygen, acts as a substrate for NOX to produce reactive oxygen species (ROS). In disease states, ROS overproduction leads to cell death. NOX inhibitors targeted to prevent this are also shown with their location of action. NOX inhibition can function through several pathways: (1) By acting on NOX via an unspecified mechanism; (2) By acting on the PKC isoforms or upstream to PKC to prevent NOX activation by inhibiting phosphorylation; (3) By inhibiting the interactions of p47-phox with NOX subunits, particularly p22-phox, preventing NOX activation by inhibiting assembly; (4) By acting directly on gp91-phox or its homologs, preventing NOX catalytic activity; and (5) By preventing Rac translocation to the NOX complex to prevent NOX activation.
This table summarizes the involvement of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NAPDH) oxidase (NOX) in the various disease states discussed in the article and the pathologic effect mediated by NOX.
| Disease | NOX involvement | Pathologic effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alzheimer’s Disease | Beta amyloid-induced activation of NOX ROS production | Neuronal cell damage/death, secondary to amyloid plaques | Bianca et al. ( |
| Parkinson’s Disease | Microglial NOX ROS production and cell damage | Dopaminergic neuronal cell loss | Gandhi et al. ( |
| TBI | NOX-induced ROS overproduction | Oxidative stress and secondary brain damage | Dohi et al. ( |
| Ischemia | Microglial NOX activation secondary to inflammation/cytokines | ROS mediated direct cell/membrane damage | Kleinschnitz et al. ( |
| ALS | NOX-induced ROS overproduction and protein oxidation | Direct ROS mediated damage and oxidative stress | Simpson et al. ( |
NOX involvement covers the relevant isoforms, if specified, as well as the pathway through which it acts to cause damage. Pathologic effect specifies the resulting pathology due to NOX invovlement in the disease state.