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The Role of NADPH Oxidases in the Etiology of Obesity and Metabolic Syndrome: Contribution of Individual Isoforms and Cell Biology.

Abstract
Significance: Highly prevalent in Western cultures, obesity, metabolic syndrome, and diabetes increase the risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality and cost health care systems billions of dollars annually. At the cellular level, obesity, metabolic syndrome, and diabetes are associated with increased production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Increased levels of ROS production in key organ systems such as adipose tissue, skeletal muscle, and the vasculature cause disruption of tissue homeostasis, leading to increased morbidity and risk of mortality. More specifically, growing evidence implicates the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidase (NOX) enzymes in these pathologies through impairment of insulin signaling, inflammation, and vascular dysfunction. The NOX family of enzymes is a major driver of redox signaling through its production of superoxide anion, hydrogen peroxide, and attendant downstream metabolites acting on redox-sensitive signaling molecules. Recent Advances: The primary goal of this review is to highlight recent advances and survey our present understanding of cell-specific NOX enzyme contributions to metabolic diseases. Critical Issues: However, due to the short half-lives of individual ROS and/or cellular defense systems, radii of ROS diffusion are commonly short, often restricting redox signaling and oxidant stress to localized events. Thus, special emphasis should be placed on cell type and subcellular location of NOX enzymes to better understand their role in the pathophysiology of metabolic diseases. Future Directions: We discuss the targeting of NOX enzymes as potential therapy and bring to light potential emerging areas of NOX research, microparticles and epigenetics, in the context of metabolic disease.
AuthorsEvan DeVallance, Yao Li, Michael J Jurczak, Eugenia Cifuentes-Pagano, Patrick J Pagano
JournalAntioxidants & redox signaling (Antioxid Redox Signal) Vol. 31 Issue 10 Pg. 687-709 (10 01 2019) ISSN: 1557-7716 [Electronic] United States
PMID31250671 (Publication Type: Journal Article, Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural, Review)
Chemical References
  • Reactive Oxygen Species
  • NADPH Oxidases
Topics
  • Animals
  • Humans
  • Metabolic Syndrome (enzymology, metabolism)
  • NADPH Oxidases (metabolism)
  • Obesity (enzymology, metabolism)
  • Oxidative Stress (physiology)
  • Reactive Oxygen Species (metabolism)
  • Signal Transduction (physiology)

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