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Título
Significance of ROS in oxygen sensing in cell systems with sensitivy to ohysiological hypoxia
Autor
Año del Documento
2002
Editorial
Elsevier
Documento Fuente
Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology 132 (2002) 17–41
Resumo
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are oxygen-containing molecular entities which are more potent and effective
oxidizing agents than is molecular oxygen itself. With the exception of phagocytic cells, where ROS play an important
physiological role in defense reactions, ROS have classically been considered undesirable byproducts of cell
metabolism, existing several cellular mechanisms aimed to dispose them. Recently, however, ROS have been
considered important intracellular signaling molecules, which may act as mediators or second messengers in many cell
functions. This is the proposed role for ROS in oxygen sensing in systems, such as carotid body chemoreceptor cells,
pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells, and erythropoietin-producing cells. These unique cells comprise essential parts
of homeostatic loops directed to maintain oxygen levels in multicellular organisms in situations of hypoxia. The
present article examines the possible significance of ROS in these three cell systems, and proposes a set of criteria that
ROS should satisfy for their consideration as mediators in hypoxic transduction cascades. In none of the three cell
types do ROS satisfy these criteria, and thus it appears that alternative mechanisms are responsible for the
transduction cascades linking hypoxia to the release of neurotransmitters in chemoreceptor cells, contraction in
pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells and erythropoietin secretion in erythropoietin producing cells.
Materias (normalizadas)
Neurofisiología
ISSN
1569-9048
Revisión por pares
SI
Idioma
eng
Derechos
openAccess
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