Cargando…

Oxidative stress and antioxidants at biosurfaces: plants, skin, and respiratory tract surfaces.

Atmospheric pollutants represent an important source of oxidative and nitrosative stress to both terrestrial plants and to animals. The exposed biosurfaces of plants and animals are directly exposed to these pollutant stresses. Not surprisingly, living organisms have developed complex integrated ext...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Cross, C E, van der Vliet, A, Louie, S, Thiele, J J, Halliwell, B
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1998
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1533356/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9788905
_version_ 1782129030272647168
author Cross, C E
van der Vliet, A
Louie, S
Thiele, J J
Halliwell, B
author_facet Cross, C E
van der Vliet, A
Louie, S
Thiele, J J
Halliwell, B
author_sort Cross, C E
collection PubMed
description Atmospheric pollutants represent an important source of oxidative and nitrosative stress to both terrestrial plants and to animals. The exposed biosurfaces of plants and animals are directly exposed to these pollutant stresses. Not surprisingly, living organisms have developed complex integrated extracellular and intracellular defense systems against stresses related to reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (ROS, RNS), including O3 and NO2. Plant and animal epithelial surfaces and respiratory tract surfaces contain antioxidants that would be expected to provide defense against environmental stress caused by ambient ROS and RNS, thus ameliorating their injurious effects on more delicate underlying cellular constituents. Parallelisms among these surfaces with regard to their antioxidant constituents and environmental oxidants are presented. The reactive substances at these biosurfaces not only represent an important protective system against oxidizing environments, but products of their reactions with ROS/RNS may also serve as biomarkers of environmental oxidative stress. Moreover, the reaction products may also induce injury to underlying cells or cause cell activation, resulting in production of proinflammatory substances including cytokines. In this review we discuss antioxidant defense systems against environmental toxins in plant cell wall/apoplastic fluids, dead keratinized cells/interstitial fluids of stratum corneum (the outermost skin layer), and mucus/respiratory tract lining fluids.
format Text
id pubmed-1533356
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 1998
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-15333562006-08-08 Oxidative stress and antioxidants at biosurfaces: plants, skin, and respiratory tract surfaces. Cross, C E van der Vliet, A Louie, S Thiele, J J Halliwell, B Environ Health Perspect Research Article Atmospheric pollutants represent an important source of oxidative and nitrosative stress to both terrestrial plants and to animals. The exposed biosurfaces of plants and animals are directly exposed to these pollutant stresses. Not surprisingly, living organisms have developed complex integrated extracellular and intracellular defense systems against stresses related to reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (ROS, RNS), including O3 and NO2. Plant and animal epithelial surfaces and respiratory tract surfaces contain antioxidants that would be expected to provide defense against environmental stress caused by ambient ROS and RNS, thus ameliorating their injurious effects on more delicate underlying cellular constituents. Parallelisms among these surfaces with regard to their antioxidant constituents and environmental oxidants are presented. The reactive substances at these biosurfaces not only represent an important protective system against oxidizing environments, but products of their reactions with ROS/RNS may also serve as biomarkers of environmental oxidative stress. Moreover, the reaction products may also induce injury to underlying cells or cause cell activation, resulting in production of proinflammatory substances including cytokines. In this review we discuss antioxidant defense systems against environmental toxins in plant cell wall/apoplastic fluids, dead keratinized cells/interstitial fluids of stratum corneum (the outermost skin layer), and mucus/respiratory tract lining fluids. 1998-10 /pmc/articles/PMC1533356/ /pubmed/9788905 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Cross, C E
van der Vliet, A
Louie, S
Thiele, J J
Halliwell, B
Oxidative stress and antioxidants at biosurfaces: plants, skin, and respiratory tract surfaces.
title Oxidative stress and antioxidants at biosurfaces: plants, skin, and respiratory tract surfaces.
title_full Oxidative stress and antioxidants at biosurfaces: plants, skin, and respiratory tract surfaces.
title_fullStr Oxidative stress and antioxidants at biosurfaces: plants, skin, and respiratory tract surfaces.
title_full_unstemmed Oxidative stress and antioxidants at biosurfaces: plants, skin, and respiratory tract surfaces.
title_short Oxidative stress and antioxidants at biosurfaces: plants, skin, and respiratory tract surfaces.
title_sort oxidative stress and antioxidants at biosurfaces: plants, skin, and respiratory tract surfaces.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1533356/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9788905
work_keys_str_mv AT crossce oxidativestressandantioxidantsatbiosurfacesplantsskinandrespiratorytractsurfaces
AT vandervlieta oxidativestressandantioxidantsatbiosurfacesplantsskinandrespiratorytractsurfaces
AT louies oxidativestressandantioxidantsatbiosurfacesplantsskinandrespiratorytractsurfaces
AT thielejj oxidativestressandantioxidantsatbiosurfacesplantsskinandrespiratorytractsurfaces
AT halliwellb oxidativestressandantioxidantsatbiosurfacesplantsskinandrespiratorytractsurfaces