4.7 Review

Redox Dysregulation in Aging and COPD: Role of NOX Enzymes and Implications for Antioxidant Strategies

Journal

ANTIOXIDANTS
Volume 10, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antiox10111799

Keywords

ageing; COPD; oxidative stress; redox signalling; NADPH oxidase; DUOX1; antioxidants

Funding

  1. NIH [HL085646, HL138708, AG055325]
  2. Dutch Lung Foundation [5.1.17.166, 6.1.16.088]

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With the aging population, the incidence of age-related lung diseases like COPD is increasing, although antioxidant supplementation strategies have had limited success in mitigating disease progression. Reactive oxygen species are believed to play a crucial role in aging, and the role of NADPH oxidase enzymes in age-related lung diseases remains largely unexplored.
With a rapidly growing elderly human population, the incidence of age-related lung diseases such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) continues to rise. It is widely believed that reactive oxygen species (ROS) play an important role in ageing and in age-related disease, and approaches of antioxidant supplementation have been touted as useful strategies to mitigate age-related disease progression, although success of such strategies has been very limited to date. Involvement of ROS in ageing is largely attributed to mitochondrial dysfunction and impaired adaptive antioxidant responses. NADPH oxidase (NOX) enzymes represent an important enzyme family that generates ROS in a regulated fashion for purposes of oxidative host defense and redox-based signalling, however, the associations of NOX enzymes with lung ageing or age-related lung disease have to date only been minimally addressed. The present review will focus on our current understanding of the impact of ageing on NOX biology and its consequences for age-related lung disease, particularly COPD, and will also discuss the implications of altered NOX biology for current and future antioxidant-based strategies aimed at treating these diseases.

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