| Literature DB >> 30665344 |
Michael D Wetzel1, Joseph C Wenke2.
Abstract
Ischemia-reperfusion injury is caused by a period of ischemia followed by massive blood flow into a tissue that had experienced restricted blood flow. The severity of the injury is dependent on the time the tissue was restricted from blood flow, becoming more severe after longer ischemia times. This can lead to many complications such as tissue necrosis, cellular apoptosis, inflammation, metabolic and mitochondrial dysfunction, and even organ failure. One of the emerging therapies to combat ischemic reperfusion injury complications is hydrogen sulfide, which is a gasotransmitter that diffuses across cell membranes to exert effects on various signaling pathways regulating cell survival such as Akt, mitochondrial activity, and apoptosis. Although commonly thought of as a toxic gas, low concentrations of hydrogen sulfide have been shown to be beneficial in promoting tissue survival post-ischemia, and modulate a wide variety of cellular responses. This review will detail the mechanisms of hydrogen sulfide in affecting the Akt signaling pathway, mitochondrial function, and apoptosis, particularly in regards to ischemic reperfusion injury in muscle tissue. It will conclude with potential clinical applications of hydrogen sulfide, combinations with other therapies, and perspectives for future studies.Entities:
Keywords: Akt; Apoptosis; Hydrogen sulfide; Ischemia reperfusion injury; Mitochondria; Muscle; eNOS
Year: 2019 PMID: 30665344 PMCID: PMC6340183 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-018-1753-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Fig. 1Roles of H2S in modulating Akt signaling pathways involved in ischemia reperfusion injury and recovery. H2S activates PI3 K and downstream Akt phosphorylation, which can also be activated by mTORC2. Akt can subsequently activate mTORC1 to regulate protein synthesis and cell proliferation, eNOS to activate vascularization by VEGF, and induce phosphorylation of FoxO3 to prevent activation of genes promoting autophagy and ubiquitination
Fig. 2Restortion of mitochondrial ATP synthesis pathways by ischemia and H2S in muscle. Dietary L-homocysteine undergoes a reverse transsulfuration reaction by CBS, CSE, and 3-MST to produce endogenous H2S. Ischemia reduces expression of these enzymes, resulting in decreased endogenous H2S production. Introduction of an exogenous H2S donor (NaHS) can increase expression of the enzymes, resulting in increased endogenous H2S synthesis. This affects mitochondria by increasing KATP activity through increased gene expression of SUR2A-Kir6.1 and/or acting through UCP-2. This leads to increased Ca2+ export form the mitochondria, stimulating ATP transport. H2S also upregulates cAMP by inhibiting PDE2A, resulting in increased mitochondrial PKA activity to stimulate the electron transport chain (ETC), resulting in increased oxygen utilization and ATP production
Apoptotic regulators associated with ischemic-reperfusion injury that are responsive to hydrogen sulfide
| H2S target | Cell/tissue type | Functions | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Akt | Cardiac, renal, neural, hepatic | JNK, mTOR, GSK3β, NR2A and B activation | [ |
| HSP | Retinal, hepatic | Thioredoxin-1 activation, ROS scavenging, reducing inflammatory cytokine induction | [ |
| JNK | Cardiac, retinal, renal, hepatic, epithelial | Bcl-2 inactivation, cytochrome C release | [ |
| Beclin-1 | Cardiac, hepatic | Decrease autophagosome formation | [ |
| GSK3β | Cardiac, hepatic, neural | Activate Bax, decrease LC3 and Beclin-1, inhibit mPTP opening, | [ |
| Bcl-2 | Cardiac, renal, hepatic, neural, epithelial | Prevent cytochrome C release, inactivate Bax | [ |
| TNFα, IL-6, IL-1β | Cardiac, skeletal muscle, lung | ROS increase, mPTP opening, Bax activation | [ |
| miRNA (1, 21, 485-5p) | Cardiac, neural | Reduce LDH, regulate transcriptional activation, reduce TNFα activity | [ |