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Reactive oxygen species and calcium signals in skeletal muscle: A crosstalk involved in both normal signaling and disease

期刊

CELL CALCIUM
卷 60, 期 3, 页码 172-179

出版社

CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ceca.2016.02.010

关键词

NADPH oxidase; Muscular dystrophy; Type 2 diabetes; Sarcopenia; Obesity; Muscle wasting; Inflammation

资金

  1. ComisionNacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia (CONICYT) [FONDECYT-1151293, PhDsupport-21151046]

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Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) have been profusely studied as agents of potential damage to living cells and they have been related to a number of pathological processes. Increasing evidence points to a more positive role of ROS in cell signaling and the detailed mechanism that regulates the precise amount of ROS needed for cell functioning without the deleterious effects of excess ROS still needs to be resolved in detail. In skeletal muscle the main source of ROS during normal functioning appears to be NADPH oxidase 2 (NOX2), which is activated by electrical stimuli (or exercise) through a cascade of events that include ATP release through pannexin1 channels. NOX2 is a protein complex that assembles in the T-tubule membrane before activation and ROS production by NOX2 appears to be important for muscle adaptation through gene expression and mitochondria biogenesis as well as for improving glucose transport after insulin action. Excess ROS production (or diminished antioxidant defenses) plays a role in a number of pathological processes in skeletal muscle. Together with increased reactive nitrogen species, an increase in ROS appears to have a deleterious role in a model of Duchenne muscular dystrophy as well as muscle wasting in other diseases such as aging sarcopenia and cancer cachexia. In addition, ROS is involved in obesity and muscle insulin resistance, both of which are causally related to type 2 diabetes. A detailed description of the fine-tuning of ROS (including all sources of ROS) in skeletal muscle in health and disease will significantly contribute to our knowledge of both muscle adaptation and muscle related pathologies. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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