| Literature DB >> 28956814 |
Chontida Yarana1,2, Daret K St Clair3.
Abstract
The short- and long-term side effects of chemotherapy limit the maximum therapeutic dose and impair quality of life of survivors. Injury to normal tissues, especially chemotherapy-induced cardiomyopathy, is an unintended outcome that presents devastating health impacts. Approximately half of the drugs approved by the Food and Drug Administration for cancer treatment are associated with the generation of reactive oxygen species, and Doxorubicin (Dox) is one of them. Dox undergoes redox cycling by involving its quinone structure in the production of superoxide free radicals, which are thought to be instrumental to the role it plays in cardiomyopathy. Dox-induced protein oxidation changes protein function, translocation, and aggregation that are toxic to cells. To maintain cellular homeostasis, oxidized proteins can be degraded intracellularly by ubiquitin-proteasome pathway or by autophagy, depending on the redox status of the cell. Alternatively, the cell can remove oxidized proteins by releasing extracellular vesicles (EVs), which can be transferred to neighboring or distant cells, thereby instigating an intercellular oxidative stress response. In this article, we discuss the role of EVs in oxidative stress response, the potential of EVs as sensitive biomarkers of oxidative stress, and the role of superoxide dismutase in attenuating EV-associated oxidative stress response resulting from chemotherapy.Entities:
Keywords: chemotherapy; extracellular vesicles; oxidative stress; superoxide dismutase
Year: 2017 PMID: 28956814 PMCID: PMC5745485 DOI: 10.3390/antiox6040075
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antioxidants (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3921
Figure 1Dox inhibits intracellular protein quality control pathways while promoting extracellular vesicle release.
Figure 2Candidate molecules in extracellular vesicles (EVs) for oxidative stress biomarkers.
Role of oxidative stress-related EVs on cell viability and tissue inflammation.
| Cell/Tissue Type of Origin | EV Type | Oxidative Stress Condition | Oxidative Stress-Related Cargo | Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cardiomyocytes | Exosomes | Ethanol, hypoxia/reoxy-genation | HSP60 | TLR4-mediated apoptosis | Heiserman et al. [ |
| Mast cells | Exosomes | H2O2 | mRNA | H2O2 tolerance | Eldh et al. [ |
| Retinal pigment epithelial cells | Exosomes | Ethanol | VEGF protein and mRNA | Angiogenesis | Atienzar-Aroca et al. [ |
| HEK293 cells | Exosomes + MVs | Ca2+ ionophore (Lipoxygenase stimulator) | Oxidized phospholipids | TLR4-mediated NFκB activation | Mancek-Keber et al. [ |
| Liver | MVs | High fat diet treated mice (NASH model) | Oxidized mtDNA | TLR9-induced TNFα, IL-6 production | Garcia-Martinez et al. [ |
| Liver | MVs | Chronic-plus-binge alcohol drinking | mtDNA | TLR9-mediated neutrophilic inflammation | Cai et al. [ |
| Liver | Exosomes | Alcoholic hepatitis | miR-122 | Sensitize monocytes to LPS | Momen-Heravi et al. [ |
| Liver | MVs | Saturated fatty acid-induced lipotoxicity | TRAIL | DR5-dependent macrophage activation | Hirsova et al. [ |
| Macrophage | Exosomes | Myocardial infarction | miR-155 | Fibroblast inflammation | Wang et al. [ |
| Cardiosphere-derived cells | EVs | Myocardial infarction | Y RNA fragment | IL-10 expression and secretion | Cambier et al. [ |