7 resultados para oxygen stress

em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna


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Results reported in this Thesis contribute to the comprehension of the complicated world of “redox biology”. ROS regulate signalling pathways both in physiological responses and in pathogenesis and progression of diseases. In cancer cells, the increase in ROS generation from metabolic abnormalities and oncogenic signalling may trigger a redox adaptation response, leading to an up-regulation of antioxidant capacity in order to maintain the ROS level below the toxic threshold. Thus, cancer cells would be more dependent on the antioxidant system and more vulnerable to further oxidative stress induced by exogenous ROS-generating agents or compounds that inhibit the antioxidant system. Results here reported indicate that the development of new drugs targeting specific Nox isoforms, responsible for intracellular ROS generation, or AQP isoforms, involved in the transport of extracellular H2O2 toward intracellular targets, might be an interesting novel anti-leukaemia strategy. Furthermore, also the use of CSD peptide, which simulate the VEGFR-2 segregation into caveolae in the inactive form, might be a strategy to stop the cellular response to VEGF signalling. As above stated, in the understanding of the redox biology, it is also important to identify and distinguish the molecular effectors that maintain normal biological and physiological responses, such as agents that stimulate our adaptation systems and elevate our endogenous antioxidant defences or other protective systems. Data here reported indicate that the nutraceutical compound sulforaphane and the Klotho protein are able to stimulate the HO-1 and Prx-1 expression, as well as the GSH levels, confirming their antioxidant and protective role. Finally, results here reported demonstrated that Stevia extracts are involved in insulin regulated glucose metabolism, suggesting that the use of these compounds goes beyond their sweetening power and may also offer therapeutic benefits hence improving the quality of life.

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In calcareous soils, which are a large share of agricultural soils worldwide, iron availability is limited. Consequently, the whole plant physiology is affected, because of the key role of iron in redox metabolism, resulting in reduced crop yield and quality. Peach cultivation is economically important in northern Italy, and is easily subjected to iron chlorosis. The management of iron nutrition in peach includes grafting on bicarbonate-tolerant rootstocks; other forms of management may be expensive and environmentally impacting. Four genotypes, used as rootstocks for peach and characterized by different degrees of tolerance to chlorosis, were tested in vitro on optimal and bicarbonate-enriched medium. Their redox status and antioxidant responses were assayed; the production and possible roles of nitric oxide (NO) and related compounds were also studied. The most sensitive genotypes show a stronger reduction of the antioxidant enzymatic activities and an increased oxidative stress. A high production of NO was found to be associated to resistant genotypes, whereas sensitive genotypes reacted to stress by downregulating nitrosoglutathione reductase activity. Therefore, NO is proposed to improve the internal iron availability, or to stimulate iron intake.

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Evidence accumulated in the last ten years has demonstrated that a large proportion of the mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes in a variety of organisms is arranged in supramolecular assemblies called supercomplexes or respirasomes. Besides conferring a kinetic advantage (substrate channeling) and being required for the assembly and stability of Complex I, indirect considerations support the view that supercomplexes may also prevent excessive formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) from the respiratory chain. Following this line of thought we have decided to directly investigate ROS production by Complex I under conditions in which the complex is arranged as a component of the supercomplex I1III2 or it is dissociated as an individual enzyme. The study has been addressed both in bovine heart mitochondrial membranes and in reconstituted proteoliposomes composed of complexes I and III in which the supramolecular organization of the respiratory assemblies is impaired by: (i) treatment either of bovine heart mitochondria or liposome-reconstituted supercomplex I-III with dodecyl maltoside; (ii) reconstitution of Complexes I and III at high phospholipids to protein ratio. The results of this investigation provide experimental evidence that the production of ROS is strongly increased in either model; supporting the view that disruption or prevention of the association between Complex I and Complex III by different means enhances the generation of superoxide from Complex I . This is the first demonstration that dissociation of the supercomplex I1III2 in the mitochondrial membrane is a cause of oxidative stress from Complex I. Previous work in our laboratory demonstrated that lipid peroxidation can dissociate the supramolecular assemblies; thus, here we confirm that preliminary conclusion that primary causes of oxidative stress may perpetuate reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation by a vicious circle involving supercomplex dissociation as a major determinant.

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Among abiotic stresses, high salinity stress is the most severe environmental stress. High salinity exerts its negative impact mainly by disrupting the ionic and osmotic equilibrium of the cell. In saline soils, high levels of sodium ions lead to plant growth inhibition and even death. Salt tolerance in plants is a multifarious phenomenon involving a variety of changes at molecular, organelle, cellular, tissue as well as whole plant level. In addition, salt tolerant plants show a range of adaptations not only in morphological or structural features but also in metabolic and physiological processes that enable them to survive under extreme saline environments. The main objectives of my dissertation were understanding the main physiological and biomolecular features of plant responses to salinity in different genotypes of horticultural crops that are belonging to different families Solanaceae (tomato) and Cucurbitaceae (melon) and Brassicaceae (cabbage and radish). Several aspects of crop responses to salinity have been addressed with the final aim of combining elements of functional stress response in plants by using several ways for the assessment of plant stress perception that ranging from destructive measurements (eg. leaf area, relative growth rate, leaf area index, and total plant fresh and dry weight), to physiological determinations (eg. stomatal conductance, leaf gas exchanges, water use efficiency, and leaf water relation), to the determination of metabolite accumulation in plant tissue (eg. Proline and protein) as well as evaluation the role of enzymatic antioxidant capacity assay in scavenging reactive oxygen species that have been generated under salinized condition, and finally assessing the gene induction and up-down regulation upon salinization (eg. SOS pathway).

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Amniotic fluid stem cells (hAFSC) are emerging as a potential therapeutic approach for various disorders. The low number of available hAFSC requires their ex vivo expansion prior to clinical use, however, during their in vitro culture, hAFSC quickly reach replicative senescence. The principal aim of this study was to investigate the aging process occurring during in vitro expansion of hAFSC, focusing on the redox control that has been reported to be affected in premature and physiological aging. My results show that a strong heterogeneity is present among samples that reflects their different behaviour in culture. I identified three proteins, namely Nox4, prelamin A and PML, which expression increases during hAFSC aging process and could be used as new biomarkers to screen the samples. Furthermore, I found that Nox4 degradation is regulated by sumoylation via proteasome and involves interactions with PML bodies and prelamin A. Since various studies revealed that donor-dependent differences could be explained by cell-to-cell variation within each patient, I studied in deep this phenomenon. I showed that the heterogeneity among samples is also accompanied by a strong intra-population heterogeneity. Separation of hAFSC subpopulations from the same donor, using Celector® technology, showed that an enrichment in the last eluted fraction could improve hAFSC application in regenerative medicine. One of the other problems is that nowadays hAFSC are expanded under atmospheric O2 concentration, which is higher than the O2 tension in their natural niches. This higher O2 concentration might cause environmental stress to the in vitro cultured hAFSCs and accelerate their aging process. Here, I showed that prolonged low oxygen tension exposure preserves different hAFSC stemness properties. In conclusion, my study pointed different approaches to improve in vitro hAFSC expansion and manipulation with the purpose to land at stem cell therapy.

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Tumor microenvironment has emerged as key factor influencing tumor progression and metastatization. In this context, small vesicles produced by cancer cells can influence the fate of their surroundings via the horizontal transfer of specific molecular cargos. Ewing Sarcoma, the second most common bone tumor in young patients, presents early metastasis associated to worse prognosis. The RNA binding protein Insulin-like Growth Factor 2 mRNA Binding Protein 3 (IGF2BP3) exerts a pro-oncogenic role associated with metastasis formation and worse prognosis in Ewing Sarcoma. Our aim was to investigate the still unexplored role of IGF2BP3 in the stress-adaptive response to tumor microenvironment and in the interactions between Ewing Sarcoma cells. Hypoxia is a major feature of Ewing Sarcoma microenvironment and we demonstrated that IGF2BP3 can direct the CXCR4-mediated migratory response to CXCL12 in Ewing Sarcoma cells subjected to oxygen deprivation. We also discovered that the interaction between IGF2BP3 and CXCR4 is regulated through CD164 and which colocalize at plasma membrane level, upon CXCL12 exposure. Interestingly, high IGF2BP3 levels in Ewing Sarcoma metastatic lesions positively correlated with the expression of both CD164 and CXCR4, indicating the IGF2BP3/CD164/CXCR4 oncogenic axis as a critical modulator of Ewing Sarcoma metastatic progression. We demonstrated for the first time that IGF2BP3 is loaded into Ewing Sarcoma derived exosomes, accordingly to its cellular levels. We discovered that IGF2BP3+ exosomes carry high levels of IGF2BP3-client mRNAs involved in cellular migration, CD164 and IGF1R, and, by transferring this cargo, sustain the migratory abilities of receiving cells, induce a sharp up-regulation of CD164, CXCR4 and IGF1R and enhance the activation of AKT/mTOR and ERK down-stream signalling pathways. We demostrated that the pro-tumorigenic role of IGF2BP3 is not only exerted at cellular level, but that intercellular communication is crucial in the context of Ewing Sarcoma microenvironment.

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Moraxella catarrhalis (Mcat) represents a human pathogen implicated in debilitating diseases, such as Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). One of the hallmarks of COPD is the excessive neutrophil oxidative stress mediated by reactive oxygen species (ROS). Mcat shows a higher innate level of resistance to exogenous oxidative stress compared to the co-infecting human airways pathogens such as non-typeable Haemophilus influenzae (NTHi) but the underlying mechanisms are currently not well defined. In this thesis, we demonstrated that, differently from NTHi, Mcat was able to directly interfere with ROS production and ROS-related responses such as neutrophil extracellular traps (NET) and autophagy in differentiated neutrophilic-like dHL-60 cells and primary cells. The underlying mechanisms were shown to be phagocytosis/opsonins-independent but contact-dependent, due to the engagement of the immunosuppressive receptors. Indeed, we identified that through OmpCD porin, Mcat was able to engage Siglec inhibitory receptors suppressing ROS generation by the host cells. Furthermore, Mcat provided a safer niche for the co-infecting NTHi bacterium which was otherwise susceptible to the host antimicrobial arsenal. Subsequently, to deeply characterize the Mcat global transcriptional response to oxidative stress, an RNA-Seq experiment was performed on exponentially growing bacteria exposed to sublethal amounts of H2O2 or CuSO4, stimuli that the pathogens experienced once they are phagocytosed. We unraveled a previously unidentified common transcriptional program following H2O2 and CuSO4 exposure, demonstrating a similar defense mechanism to the stress conditions encountered in neutrophils. We ascertained new crucial factors for this pathogen response and established a novel in vivo Mcat infection model, using the invertebrate Galleria mellonella. Actually, we observed that deletion mutants of genes implicated in oxidative stress resistance exhibited reduced virulence. In conclusion, this work represents an important step in the understanding of Mcat innate resistance mechanisms to oxidative stress and further elucidate the virulence mechanisms during infection.