Li Jinyang, Liu Yi, Kim Eunkyoung, March John C, Bentley William E, Payne Gregory F
Fischell Department of Bioengineering, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA; Institute for Bioscience and Biotechnology Research, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA.
Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, USA.
Free Radic Biol Med. 2017 Apr;105:110-131. doi: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2016.12.029. Epub 2016 Dec 29.
The intestine is the site of digestion and forms a critical interface between the host and the outside world. This interface is composed of host epithelium and a complex microbiota which is "connected" through an extensive web of chemical and biological interactions that determine the balance between health and disease for the host. This biology and the associated chemical dialogues occur within a context of a steep oxygen gradient that provides the driving force for a variety of reduction and oxidation (redox) reactions. While some redox couples (e.g., catecholics) can spontaneously exchange electrons, many others are kinetically "insulated" (e.g., biothiols) allowing the biology to set and control their redox states far from equilibrium. It is well known that within cells, such non-equilibrated redox couples are poised to transfer electrons to perform reactions essential to immune defense (e.g., transfer from NADH to O for reactive oxygen species, ROS, generation) and protection from such oxidative stresses (e.g., glutathione-based reduction of ROS). More recently, it has been recognized that some of these redox-active species (e.g., HO) cross membranes and diffuse into the extracellular environment including lumen to transmit redox information that is received by atomically-specific receptors (e.g., cysteine-based sulfur switches) that regulate biological functions. Thus, redox has emerged as an important modality in the chemical signaling that occurs in the intestine and there have been emerging efforts to develop the experimental tools needed to probe this modality. We suggest that electrochemistry provides a unique tool to experimentally probe redox interactions at a systems level. Importantly, electrochemistry offers the potential to enlist the extensive theories established in signal processing in an effort to "reverse engineer" the molecular communication occurring in this complex biological system. Here, we review our efforts to develop this electrochemical tool for in vitro redox-probing.
肠道是消化的场所,是宿主与外界之间的关键界面。这个界面由宿主上皮和复杂的微生物群组成,它们通过广泛的化学和生物相互作用网络“连接”在一起,这些相互作用决定了宿主健康与疾病之间的平衡。这种生物学现象以及相关的化学对话发生在陡峭的氧梯度环境中,该梯度为各种还原和氧化(氧化还原)反应提供了驱动力。虽然一些氧化还原对(如儿茶酚类)可以自发地交换电子,但许多其他氧化还原对在动力学上是“隔离”的(如生物硫醇),这使得生物体能够设定和控制其远离平衡的氧化还原状态。众所周知,在细胞内,这种非平衡的氧化还原对随时准备转移电子以进行免疫防御所必需的反应(如从NADH转移电子给O以产生活性氧,ROS)以及抵御这种氧化应激(如基于谷胱甘肽的ROS还原)。最近,人们认识到其中一些氧化还原活性物质(如HO)会穿过细胞膜并扩散到包括肠腔在内的细胞外环境中,以传递被原子特异性受体(如基于半胱氨酸的硫开关)接收的氧化还原信息,从而调节生物学功能。因此,氧化还原已成为肠道中发生的化学信号传导中的一种重要方式,并且人们一直在努力开发探测这种方式所需的实验工具。我们认为电化学提供了一种独特的工具,可以在系统水平上通过实验探测氧化还原相互作用。重要的是,电化学有潜力利用信号处理中建立的广泛理论,努力“逆向工程”这个复杂生物系统中发生的分子通讯。在这里,我们回顾了我们为开发这种用于体外氧化还原探测的电化学工具所做的努力。