Medical College of Wisconsin
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Lipid hydroperoxide generation, turnover, and effector action in biological systems. J Lipid Res 1998 Aug;39(8):1529-42

Date

08/26/1998

Pubmed ID

9717713

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-0031821531 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   1049 Citations

Abstract

Lipid peroxidation is a well known example of oxidative damage in cell membranes, lipoproteins, and other lipid-containing structures. Peroxidative modification of unsaturated phospholipids, glycolipids, and cholesterol can occur in reactions triggered by i) free radical species such as oxyl radicals, peroxyl radicals, and hydroxyl radicals derived from iron-mediated reduction of hydrogen peroxide or ii) non-radical species such as singlet oxygen, ozone, and peroxynitrite generated by the reaction of superoxide with nitric oxide. Lipid hydroperoxides (LOOHs) are prominent non-radical intermediates of lipid peroxidation whose identification can often provide valuable mechanistic information, e.g., whether a primary reaction is mediated by singlet oxygen or oxyradicals. Certain cholesterol-derived hydroperoxides (ChOOHs) have been used very effectively in this regard, both in model systems and cells. Being more polar than parent lipids, LOOHs perturb membrane structure/function and can be deleterious to cells on this basis alone. However, LOOHs can also participate in redox reactions, the nature and magnitude of which often determines whether peroxidative injury is exacerbated or prevented. Exacerbation may reflect iron-catalyzed one-electron reduction of LOOHs, resulting in free radical-mediated chain peroxidation, whereas prevention may reflect selenoperoxidase-catalyzed two-electron reduction of LOOHs to relatively non-toxic alcohols. LOOH partitioning between these two pathways in an oxidatively stressed cell is still poorly understood, but recent cell studies involving various ChOOHs have begun to shed light on this important question. An aspect of related interest that is under intensive investigation is lipid peroxidation/LOOH-mediated stress signaling, which may evoke a variety of cellular responses, ranging from induction of antioxidant enzymes to apoptotic death. Ongoing exploration of these processes will have important bearing on our understanding of disease states associated with peroxidative stress.

Author List

Girotti AW



MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Animals
Apoptosis
Cell Survival
Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid
Electrons
Humans
Lipid Peroxidation
Lipid Peroxides
Models, Biological
Oxidation-Reduction
Oxidative Stress
Phospholipases
Protein Kinases
Reactive Oxygen Species
Signal Transduction