Suzuki Y J, Forman H J, Sevanian A
Department of Pharmacology, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC 20007-2197, USA.
Free Radic Biol Med. 1997;22(1-2):269-85. doi: 10.1016/s0891-5849(96)00275-4.
Redox (oxidation-reduction) reactions regulate signal transduction. Oxidants such as superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, hydroxyl radicals, and lipid hydroperoxides (i.e., reactive oxygen species) are now realized as signaling molecules under subtoxic conditions. Nitric oxide is also an example of a redox mediator. Reactive oxygen species induce various biological processes such as gene expression by stimulating signal transduction components such as Ca(2+)-signaling and protein phosphorylation. Various oxidants increase cytosolic Ca2+; however, the exact origin of Ca2+ is controversial. Ca2+ may be released from the endoplasmic reticulum, extracellular space, or mitochondria in response to oxidant-influence on Ca2+ pumps, channels, and transporters. Alternatively, oxidants may release Ca2+ from Ca2+ binding proteins. Various oxidants stimulate tyrosine as well as serine/threonine phosphorylation, and direct stimulation of protein kinases and inhibition of protein phosphatases by oxidants have been proposed as mechanisms. The oxidant-stimulation of the effector molecules such as phospholipase A2 as well as the activation of oxidative stress-responsive transcription factors may also depend on the oxidant-mediated activation of Ca(2+)-signaling and/or protein phosphorylation. In addition to the stimulation of signal transduction by oxidants, the observations that ligand-receptor interactions produce reactive oxygen species and that antioxidants block receptor-mediated signal transduction led to a proposal that reactive oxygen species may be second messengers for transcription factor activation, apoptosis, bone resorption, cell growth, and chemotaxis. Physiological significance of the role of biological oxidants in the regulation of signal transduction as well as the mechanisms of the oxidant-stimulation of signal transduction are discussed.
氧化还原反应调节信号转导。超氧化物、过氧化氢、羟基自由基和脂质氢过氧化物等氧化剂(即活性氧)现在被认为是在亚毒性条件下的信号分子。一氧化氮也是氧化还原介质的一个例子。活性氧通过刺激信号转导成分如Ca(2+)信号和蛋白质磷酸化来诱导各种生物学过程,如基因表达。各种氧化剂会增加细胞质中的Ca2+;然而,Ca2+的确切来源存在争议。Ca2+可能会因氧化剂对Ca2+泵、通道和转运蛋白的影响而从内质网、细胞外空间或线粒体中释放出来。或者,氧化剂可能会从Ca2+结合蛋白中释放Ca2+。各种氧化剂会刺激酪氨酸以及丝氨酸/苏氨酸磷酸化,并且有人提出氧化剂直接刺激蛋白激酶和抑制蛋白磷酸酶是其机制。氧化剂对效应分子如磷脂酶A2的刺激以及氧化应激反应性转录因子的激活也可能取决于氧化剂介导的Ca(2+)信号和/或蛋白质磷酸化的激活。除了氧化剂对信号转导的刺激外,配体-受体相互作用产生活性氧以及抗氧化剂阻断受体介导的信号转导的观察结果,导致有人提出活性氧可能是转录因子激活、细胞凋亡、骨吸收、细胞生长和趋化作用的第二信使。本文讨论了生物氧化剂在信号转导调节中的作用的生理意义以及氧化剂刺激信号转导的机制。