| Literature DB >> 28959211 |
Jaya Kumar1, Seong Lin Teoh2, Srijit Das2, Pasuk Mahakknaukrauh3,4,5.
Abstract
Oxidative stress occurs in diabetes, various cancers, liver diseases, stroke, rheumatoid arthritis, chronic inflammation, and other degenerative diseases related to the nervous system. The free radicals have deleterious effect on various organs of the body. This is due to lipid peroxidation and irreversible protein modification that leads to cellular apoptosis or programmed cell death. During recent years, there is a rise in the oral diseases related to oxidative stress. Oxidative stress in oral disease is related to other systemic diseases in the body such as periodontitis, cardiovascular, pancreatic, gastric, and liver diseases. In the present review, we discuss the various pathways that mediate oxidative cellular damage. Numerous pathways mediate oxidative cellular damage and these include caspase pathway, PERK/NRF2 pathway, NADPH oxidase 4 pathways and JNK/mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase pathway. We also discuss the role of inflammatory markers, lipid peroxidation, and role of oxygen species linked to oxidative stress. Knowledge of different pathways, role of inflammatory markers, and importance of low-density lipoprotein, fibrinogen, creatinine, nitric oxide, nitrates, and highly sensitive C-reactive proteins may be helpful in understanding the pathogenesis and plan better treatment for oral diseases which involve oxidative stress.Entities:
Keywords: disease; free radicals; inflammation; oral; oxidative stress; pathways
Year: 2017 PMID: 28959211 PMCID: PMC5603668 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2017.00693
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Figure 1A schematic depiction of how caspase-associated pathways leads to oxidative damage via mitochondrial- and death receptor-mediated cellular apoptosis. In mitochondrial-mediated apoptosis, generation of ROS causes the release of cytochrome C from mitochondria, which via a cascade of cellular actions activates caspase-9 and then caspase-3 that eventually channels cell death. In death receptor-mediated apoptosis, oxidative stress-driven death ligands activates caspase-8, which then activates a pro-apoptotic protein known as Bid, which once activated travels to mitochondria to facilitate mitochondria-mediated apoptotic pathway. Death receptor-activated caspase-8 also activates caspase-3 to induce cell death.
Figure 2A simplified representation on the role of NOX4 in cellular pathway toward ROS-induced oxidative stress. Activity of NOX4 is regulated through regulation of the enzyme's expression by various transcription factors, protein kinase, cellular receptor, and epigenetic regulator. Enhanced NOX4 expression or activity in mitochondria leads to increased ROS production that subsequently causes mitochondrial damage and cell death. Excess ROS also likely to travel toward cytoplasm and activate numerous pro-apoptotic proteins and also activate nuclear factor kappa beta to trigger a pro-inflammatory state of the cell.
Figure 3A schematic diagram showing the mechanism of NRF2 in protection against oxidative stress. Under normal condition, a protein called Keap1 suppresses the activity of NRF2 by physically binding to NRF2 and at the same time anchored to cytoplasm. Following a period of inactivity, NRF2 is degraded by proteasomes. During oxidative stress, oxidants will be sensed by the Keap1/NRF2 complex via reactive cysteine residues in Keap1. Upon oxidant sensing, NRF2 undergoes phosphorylation at serine40 releasing Keap1 from the complex. This is followed by the translocation of NRF2 to nucleus where the protein forms a heterodimer with small transcription factor Maf and binds to antioxidant response enzyme (ARE) of numerous antioxidant gene promoter regions to initiate their transcription in response to oxidative stress.
Association between periodontal disease and cardiovascular diseases.
| Adults with aged >40 years in Korea. | 1,343 | Periodontitis was associated with subclinical atherosclerosis and peripheral arterial disease. | Ahn et al., |
| Adults with aged 60–96 years in Sweden. | 499 | Significant association between periodontitis and carotid calcification. | Bengtsson et al., |
| Participants in the baltimore longitudinal study of aging. | 278 | Periodontal disease, endodontic burden, number of teeth and oral inflammatory burden were associated with incident cardiovascular events. | Gomes et al., |
| Periodontitis patients in Denmark | 100,694 | Periodontitis patients were at higher risk of myocardial infarction, ischemic stroke, cardiovascular death, major adverse cardiovascular events, and all-cause mortality. | Hansen et al., |
| Dental patients in University of Amsterdam. | 109 | Periodontitis is associated with increased arterial stiffness. | Houcken et al., |
| Coronary artery obstruction patients in Isfahan, Iran. | 82 | Positive correlation between variables gingival recession, pocket depth, clinical attachment level, decayed, missing, decayed-missing-filled, bleeding on probing, and degree of coronary artery obstruction. | Ketabi et al., |
| Adults with aged 35–65 years in Bhopal, India. | 40 | Periodontitis patients was associated with higher carotid intima-media thickness and diastolic blood pressure. | Khatri et al., |
| Adults with mean age 46 years, mean BMI 21.1 kg/m2 in Bangladesh. | 917 | Mean attachment loss was associated with increased carotid intima-media thickness. | Wu et al., |
| Patients that underwent coronary angiography. | 195 | No significant associations were found between periodontal variables and vessel obstruction. Tooth loss was found to be a risk indicator for coronary heart disease. | Zanella et al., |
| Meta-analysis of 15 observational studies | 17,330 | Presence of periodontal disease was associated with carotid atherosclerosis. | Zeng et al., |
| Dental patients aged >35 years in Netherlands. | 60,174 | Periodontitis showed significant association with atherosclerosis. | Beukers et al., |
| Patients referred from the Department of Cardiovascular Surgery to Department of Periodontology. | 60 | Periodontitis raised the odds ratio for having peripheral arterial disease. | Calapkorur et al., |
| Adults with aged 20–40 years in India. | 60 | Severe generalized periodontitis was associated with subclinical atherosclerosis | Natarajan and Midhun, |
Figure 4Schematic diagram to show how oral disease may be linked to cardiovascular disease.