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Oxidative stress : emerging mitochondrial and cellular themes and variations in neuronal injury

journal contribution
posted on 2010-01-01, 00:00 authored by G Higgins, P Beart, Y Shin, M Chen, Steve Cheung, P Nagley
Oxidative stress plays a central role in neuronal injury and cell death in acute and chronic pathological conditions. The cellular responses to oxidative stress embrace changes in mitochondria and other organelles, notably endoplasmic reticulum, and can lead to a number of cell death paradigms, which cover a spectrum from apoptosis to necrosis and include autophagy. In Alzheimer's disease, and other pathologies including Parkinson's disease, protein aggregation provides further cellular stresses that can initiate or feed into the pathways to cell death engendered by oxidative stress. Specific attention is paid here to mitochondrial dysfunction and programmed cell death, and the diverse modes of cell death mediated by mitochondria under oxidative stress. Novel insights into cellular responses to neuronal oxidative stress from a range of different stressors can be gained by detailed transcriptomics analyses. Such studies at the cellular level provide the key for understanding the molecular and cellular pathways whereby neurons respond to oxidative stress and undergo injury and death. These considerations underpin the development of detailed knowledge in more complex integrated systems, up to the intact human bearing the neuropathology, facilitating therapeutic advances.

History

Journal

Journal of alzheimer's disease

Volume

20

Issue

Supplement 2

Pagination

453 - 473

Publisher

IOS Press

Location

Amsterdam, Netherlands

ISSN

1387-2877

eISSN

1875-8908

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2010, IOS

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