| Literature DB >> 30038581 |
Giuseppe Valacchi1,2, Fabio Virgili3, Carlo Cervellati4, Alessandra Pecorelli1.
Abstract
Inflammation is a complex systemic response evolved to cope with cellular injury, either due to infectious agents or, in general, with sporadic events challenging tissue integrity and function. Researchers involved in different fields have the tendency to look at the inflammatory response with different angles, according to their specific interest. Established its complexity, one of the most evident features of the inflammatory response is the generation of a pro-oxidative environment due to the production of high fluxes of pro-oxidant species. This production begins locally, close to the sites of tissue damage or infection, but eventually becomes a chronic challenge for the organism, if the inflammatory response is not properly controlled. In this review, we focus on this specific aspect of chronic, low-level sub-clinical inflammatory response. We propose the term "OxInflammation" as a novel operative term describing a permanent pro-oxidative feature that interact, in a positive feed-back manner, to a not yet clinically detectable inflammatory process, leading in a long run (chronically) to a systemic/local damage, as a consequence of the cross talk between inflammatory, and oxidative stress mediators. Therefore, it could be useful to analyze inflammatory markers in pathologies where there is an alteration of the redox homeostasis, although an inflammatory status is not clinically evident.Entities:
Keywords: NFκB; biomarkers; inflammation mediators; neurological disorders; oxidative stress
Year: 2018 PMID: 30038581 PMCID: PMC6046448 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2018.00858
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Main biomarkers of oxidative stress-induced damage.
| F2-isoprostanes (F2-iso) | urine/serum/plasma/cells/ breath/CSF | GC-MS/MS LC-MS/MS ELISA | •[-] Specifically derived from oxidation of arachidonic acid •[-] Widely regarded as the best marker of lipid-peroxidation (Dalle-Donne et al., | |
| Malondialdehyde (MDA) | serum/plasma/urine/cells | GC-MS/MS LC-MS/MS HPLC-FD Spectrophotometric assay Spectrofluorimetric assay | •[-] Physiologic ketoaldehyde produced by lipid- peroxidation •[-]The most assessed marker of lipid-peroxidation •[-] Spectrophotometric/spectrofluorimetric assays lack of specificity and sensitivity •[-] Can easily form stable protein adducts (Dalle-Donne et al., | |
| 4-hydroxynonenal (4-HNE) | serum/plasma/cells | GC/MS ELISA | •[-] Aldehyde produced by lipid-peroxidation •[-] Can easily form stable protein adducts (Valacchi et al., | |
| Lipid hydroperoxides (LOOH) | serum/plasma | GC/MS Spectrophotometric assay Spectrofluorimetric assay | •[-] Relatively stable byproducts of lipid peroxidation •[-] Specificity/sensitivity problem of spectrophotometric/spectrofluorimetric methods | |
| 2-propenal (acrolein) | serum/plasma/cells | LC–MS–MS LC/GC–MS Immunoblot ELISA | •[-] The most abundant aldehydes produced by lipid-peroxidation •[-] Reacts with DNA, phospholipids and protein (Tully et al., | |
| Oxidized low density lipoprotein (oxLDL) | serum/plasma | HPLC Spectrophotometric assay ELISA | •[-] Derived from oxidation of lipid component of LDL •[-] Well-established biomarker of cardiovascular disease risk •[-] The validity of oxLDL a marker of oxidative stress has been questioned (Frijhoff et al., | |
| Protein carbonyls | serum/plasma/CSF/cells | HPLC ELISA Immunoblot Spectrophotometric assays | •[-] Aldehydes and ketones produced from nonspecific oxidation of protein side chains •[-] Spectrophotometric and ELISA, although very unspecific, are the most frequently used assay methods (Dalle-Donne et al., | |
| Advanced Oxidation protein products (AOPP) | serum/plasma/urine | Spectrophotometric assays | •[-] Class of dityrosine-containing protein products •[-] Available high-throughput methods •[-] Analytical specificity problem (Cervellati et al., | |
| Nitrotyrosine (Tyr-NO2) | serum/plasma /urine | GC-MS/MS HPLC-MS/MS HPLC-ED ELISA | •[-] Stable byproduct of oxidation mediated peroxynitrite anion and nitrogen dioxide •[-] Specificity/sensitivity problem of immunological methods (Dalle-Donne et al., | |
| 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2′-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG) | urine/serum/plasma/CSF/cells | GC-MS/MS HPLC-MS/MS ELISA | •[-] Major product of oxidative DNA damage (Goto et al., | |
| 8-hydroxyguanosine (8-OHG) | urine/serum/CSF/cells | HPLC-MS/MS HPLC ELISA | •[-] Major product of oxidative RNA damage (Henriksen et al., | |
| Advanced glycationend products (AGEs) | urine/plasma/serum/CSF/cells | LC-MS/MS HPLC ELISA Spectrophotometric assays | •[-] Byproducts of nonenzymatic reaction of reducing sugars with amino groups of lipids, DNA, and proteins •[-] Analytical methods are limited by high heterogeneity of AGEs (Frijhoff et al., | |
CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; ELISA, enzyme linked immunosorbent assay; GC, gas chromatography; MS, mass spectrometry; MS/MS, tandem mass spectrometry; LC, liquid chromatography; HPLC, high pressure liquid chromatography; FD, fluorimetric detection; ED, electrochemical detection.
Scheme 1A dysfunction of a proper negative feedback regulation of the inflammatory response may result in the stabilization of a low-grade chronic activation of a vicious circle, characterized by a constant generation of a pro-oxidant environment, triggering in turn a sub-clinical systemic pro-inflammatory status. This condition, to be defined as “OxInflammation,” can induce a derangement from adaptive homeostatic capacities of the organism and eventually lead to overt pathological metabolic dysfunctions such as type II diabetes and related degenerative disease. OxInflammation plays an important role both in determining the clinical outcomes associated to several “genetic diseases,” such as Down syndrome, Rett Syndrome and sickle cells disease and also to other complex diseases determined by complex gene/environment interaction, such as metabolic syndrome and related degenerative complications, including cardiovascular diseases and cancer.