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Redox Homeostasis in Well-differentiated Primary Human Nasal Epithelial Cells

Oxidative stress (OS) in the airway epithelium is associated with inflammation, cell damage, and mitochondrial dysfunction that may initiate or worsen respiratory disease. Redox regulation maintains the equilibrium of pro-oxidant/antioxidant reactions but can be disturbed by environmental exposures....

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Autores principales: Yamamoto, Ayaho, Sly, Peter D., Henningham, Anna, Begum, Nelufa, Yeo, Abrey J., Fantino, Emmanuelle
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9912202/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36777036
http://dx.doi.org/10.33696/signaling.3.083
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author Yamamoto, Ayaho
Sly, Peter D.
Henningham, Anna
Begum, Nelufa
Yeo, Abrey J.
Fantino, Emmanuelle
author_facet Yamamoto, Ayaho
Sly, Peter D.
Henningham, Anna
Begum, Nelufa
Yeo, Abrey J.
Fantino, Emmanuelle
author_sort Yamamoto, Ayaho
collection PubMed
description Oxidative stress (OS) in the airway epithelium is associated with inflammation, cell damage, and mitochondrial dysfunction that may initiate or worsen respiratory disease. Redox regulation maintains the equilibrium of pro-oxidant/antioxidant reactions but can be disturbed by environmental exposures. The mechanism(s) underlying the induction and impact of OS on airway epithelium and how these influences on respiratory disease is poorly understood. The aim of this study was to develop a stress response model in primary human nasal epithelial cells (NECs) grown at the air-liquid interface (ALI) into a well-differentiated epithelium and to use this model to investigate the mechanisms underlying OS. Hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) was used to induce acute OS and the responses were measured with trans epithelial electrical resistance (TEER), membrane permeability, cell death (LDH release), mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (mtROS) generation, redox status (GSH/GSSG ratio), cellular ATP, and signaling pathways (SIRT1, FOXO3, p53, p21, PINK1, PARKIN, NRF2). Following 25 mM (sensitive) or 50mM (resistant) H(2)O(2) exposure, cell integrity decreased (p<0.05), GSH/GSSG ratio reduced (p<0.05), and ATP production declined by 83% (p<0.05) in the sensitive and 55% (p<0.05) in the resistant group; mtROS production increased 3.4-fold (p<0.001). Significant inter-individual differences between healthy humans with regards to susceptibility to OS, and differential activation of various pathways (FOXO3, PARKIN) were observed. These intra-individual differences in susceptibility to OS may be attributed to resistant individuals having more mitochondria or greater mitochondrial function.
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spelling pubmed-99122022023-02-10 Redox Homeostasis in Well-differentiated Primary Human Nasal Epithelial Cells Yamamoto, Ayaho Sly, Peter D. Henningham, Anna Begum, Nelufa Yeo, Abrey J. Fantino, Emmanuelle J Cell Signal Article Oxidative stress (OS) in the airway epithelium is associated with inflammation, cell damage, and mitochondrial dysfunction that may initiate or worsen respiratory disease. Redox regulation maintains the equilibrium of pro-oxidant/antioxidant reactions but can be disturbed by environmental exposures. The mechanism(s) underlying the induction and impact of OS on airway epithelium and how these influences on respiratory disease is poorly understood. The aim of this study was to develop a stress response model in primary human nasal epithelial cells (NECs) grown at the air-liquid interface (ALI) into a well-differentiated epithelium and to use this model to investigate the mechanisms underlying OS. Hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) was used to induce acute OS and the responses were measured with trans epithelial electrical resistance (TEER), membrane permeability, cell death (LDH release), mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (mtROS) generation, redox status (GSH/GSSG ratio), cellular ATP, and signaling pathways (SIRT1, FOXO3, p53, p21, PINK1, PARKIN, NRF2). Following 25 mM (sensitive) or 50mM (resistant) H(2)O(2) exposure, cell integrity decreased (p<0.05), GSH/GSSG ratio reduced (p<0.05), and ATP production declined by 83% (p<0.05) in the sensitive and 55% (p<0.05) in the resistant group; mtROS production increased 3.4-fold (p<0.001). Significant inter-individual differences between healthy humans with regards to susceptibility to OS, and differential activation of various pathways (FOXO3, PARKIN) were observed. These intra-individual differences in susceptibility to OS may be attributed to resistant individuals having more mitochondria or greater mitochondrial function. 2022 /pmc/articles/PMC9912202/ /pubmed/36777036 http://dx.doi.org/10.33696/signaling.3.083 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Article
Yamamoto, Ayaho
Sly, Peter D.
Henningham, Anna
Begum, Nelufa
Yeo, Abrey J.
Fantino, Emmanuelle
Redox Homeostasis in Well-differentiated Primary Human Nasal Epithelial Cells
title Redox Homeostasis in Well-differentiated Primary Human Nasal Epithelial Cells
title_full Redox Homeostasis in Well-differentiated Primary Human Nasal Epithelial Cells
title_fullStr Redox Homeostasis in Well-differentiated Primary Human Nasal Epithelial Cells
title_full_unstemmed Redox Homeostasis in Well-differentiated Primary Human Nasal Epithelial Cells
title_short Redox Homeostasis in Well-differentiated Primary Human Nasal Epithelial Cells
title_sort redox homeostasis in well-differentiated primary human nasal epithelial cells
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9912202/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36777036
http://dx.doi.org/10.33696/signaling.3.083
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