4.7 Review

Selenium, a Micronutrient That Modulates Cardiovascular Health via Redox Enzymology

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu13093238

Keywords

selenium; selenoprotein; cardiovascular disease; reactive oxygen species; endothelial dysfunction; vascular smooth muscle cell; cardiac; thrombosis; atherosclerosis; inflammation

Funding

  1. National Institute of Health [HG007690, HL108630, HL119145, HL155096, 501 HL155107]
  2. American Heart Association [D700382, CV-19]

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Selenium is a trace nutrient that promotes human health through selenoproteins, with many of them playing essential roles in protecting against oxidative stress. Selenoproteins are crucial in regulating cellular reactive oxygen species and cardiovascular diseases.
Selenium (Se) is a trace nutrient that promotes human health through its incorporation into selenoproteins in the form of the redox-active amino acid selenocysteine (Sec). There are 25 selenoproteins in humans, and many of them play essential roles in the protection against oxidative stress. Selenoproteins, such as glutathione peroxidase and thioredoxin reductase, play an important role in the reduction of hydrogen and lipid hydroperoxides, and regulate the redox status of Cys in proteins. Emerging evidence suggests a role for endoplasmic reticulum selenoproteins, such as selenoproteins K, S, and T, in mediating redox homeostasis, protein modifications, and endoplasmic reticulum stress. Selenoprotein P, which functions as a carrier of Se to tissues, also participates in regulating cellular reactive oxygen species. Cellular reactive oxygen species are essential for regulating cell growth and proliferation, protein folding, and normal mitochondrial function, but their excess causes cell damage and mitochondrial dysfunction, and promotes inflammatory responses. Experimental evidence indicates a role for individual selenoproteins in cardiovascular diseases, primarily by modulating the damaging effects of reactive oxygen species. This review examines the roles that selenoproteins play in regulating vascular and cardiac function in health and disease, highlighting their antioxidant and redox actions in these processes.

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