| Literature DB >> 31159153 |
Tyler W LeBaron1,2, Branislav Kura3, Barbora Kalocayova4, Narcis Tribulova5, Jan Slezak6.
Abstract
Cardiovascular diseases are the most common causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Redox dysregulation and a dyshomeostasis of inflammation arise from, and result in, cellular aberrations and pathological conditions, which lead to cardiovascular diseases. Despite years of intensive research, there is still no safe and effective method for their prevention and treatment. Recently, molecular hydrogen has been investigated in preclinical and clinical studies on various diseases associated with oxidative and inflammatory stress such as radiation-induced heart disease, ischemia-reperfusion injury, myocardial and brain infarction, storage of the heart, heart transplantation, etc. Hydrogen is primarily administered via inhalation, drinking hydrogen-rich water, or injection of hydrogen-rich saline. It favorably modulates signal transduction and gene expression resulting in suppression of proinflammatory cytokines, excess ROS production, and in the activation of the Nrf2 antioxidant transcription factor. Although H2 appears to be an important biological molecule with anti-oxidant, anti-inflammatory, and anti-apoptotic effects, the exact mechanisms of action remain elusive. There is no reported clinical toxicity; however, some data suggests that H2 has a mild hormetic-like effect, which likely mediate some of its benefits. The mechanistic data, coupled with the pre-clinical and clinical studies, suggest that H2 may be useful for ROS/inflammation-induced cardiotoxicity and other conditions.Entities:
Keywords: heart transplantation; ischemia/reperfusion injury; molecular hydrogen; oxidative stress; radiation-induced heart disease
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31159153 PMCID: PMC6600250 DOI: 10.3390/molecules24112076
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Production of ROS: effect of antioxidants and selective action of H2. Schematic reactions of ROS production by action of enzymes during respiration in mitochondria. Green color represents non-radical molecules, red color represents ROS created from normal respiration, yellow color indicates action of H2.
Various mechanism underlying the pathophysiology of myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury (modified according to reference [60]) JNK = c-Jun N-terminal kinase, AMPK = AMP-activated protein kinase, HIF-1α = Hypoxia-inducible factor 1-alpha.
| Alteration Caused by I/R Injury | Mechanism |
|---|---|
| Changes in ion flux | Accumulation of intracellular calcium |
| Increased sodium influx | |
| Abnormal potassium flux | |
| Drop in pH followed by normalization upon reperfusion | |
| Loss of mitochondrial membrane potential | Opening of mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) |
| Cytochrome c release | |
| Reduction of ATP synthesis | |
| Reactive oxygen species (ROS) | Substrate-level induction of xanthine oxidase resulting in more ROS |
| Impaired mitochondrial function | |
| Neutrophil infiltration | |
| ROS-induced ROS | |
| Dysregulated nitric oxide (NO) metabolism | Loss of NO-vasodilation |
| Production of peroxynitrite | |
| Abnormal S-nitrosation | |
| Apoptosis | JNK pathway |
| Ceramide generation | |
| Cytoplasm acidification | |
| Caspase activation | |
| Autophagic cell death | Excessive AMPK activation |
| Excessive induction of HIF-1α | |
| Endothelial dysfunction | Cytokine, myokine, chemokine signaling |
| Expression of cellular adhesion markers | |
| Impaired vasodilation | |
| Platelet aggregation | |
| Immune activation | Innate immunity (e.g., complement activation, induction of Toll-like receptors) |
| Neutrophil accumulation |
Figure 2Mechanism of H2 action: transcription and production of innate antioxidants upon entry into cell cytoplasm, release and accumulation of Nrf2 and its translocation into the nucleus. CAT = catalase, SOD = superoxide dismutase, GTP = glutathione peroxidase.
Figure 3Effect of molecular hydrogen on irradiation-induced lipid peroxidation and inflammation. The marker of oxidative stress, malondialdehyde (MDA), was elevated in blood plasma after irradiation of rat myocardium. Application of molecular hydrogen (H2) significantly decreased the levels of MDA. Myocardium irradiation increased levels of the inflammatory marker TNF-α in the rat´s heart tissue. Significant reduction of TNF-α was observed after H2 treatment. OS = oxidative stress, H2 = molecular hydrogen. Values are means ± SD, n = 5, *: p < 0.05. Modified from reference [8].
Figure 4Mechanisms of molecular hydrogen action in condition of increased oxidative stress. Molecular hydrogen has been demonstrated to provide protective effects via several mechanisms including antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and cytoprotective actions, as well as via signal modulation.