Antioxidant and Cytoprotective Activity
A special issue of Antioxidants (ISSN 2076-3921).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (20 April 2020) | Viewed by 103816
Special Issue Editor
Interests: polyphenols; flavonolignans; Silybum marianum; flavonols; quercetin; rutin; isoquercitrin; metabolites; gut microbiota; biotransformation by enzymes and whole cells
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Numerous chronic diseases are associated with oxidative stress and therefore some natural and synthetic antioxidants are proposed for the prevention and treatment of such diseases. Cellular protection against oxidative and electrophile toxicities (chemoprevention) can be ensured by two types of small molecules: Redox active, short-living direct antioxidants and indirect antioxidants that could have anti- and prooxidant activity, activating the Keap1/Nrf2/ARE pathway, which results in transcriptional induction of cytoprotective proteins. The pathophysiology of oxidative stress in humans is complex: Individual protective systems cooperate in a complex functional interplay; cytoprotective proteins are involved in the synthesis and/or regeneration of direct antioxidants, which in turn are often required for the catalytic functions of cytoprotective proteins. Direct antioxidant therapy usually failing in clinical trials and recent studies mostly confirms the involvement of several cell signaling pathways in cell protection in oxidative-stress-related conditions. Further investigation into this subject will provide renewed insight into the implication of oxidative stress in chronic diseases.
This Special Issue welcomes original research papers or reviews that deal with cytoprotective activity of natural antioxidants and inducers of cytoprotective proteins from plants or microorganisms, but also (semi)synthetic molecules and especially pleiotropic agents with protective effects in, for example, carcinogenesis, cardiovascular diseases, chronic respiratory diseases, diabetes mellitus, neurodegenerative diseases, retinal damage, and others. Studies focusing on the molecular mechanism of action of cytoprotective agents are particularly welcome. Studies based on undefined mixtures, extracts, or “principles” will not be accepted for publication in this Issue.
Dr. Kateřina Valentová
Guest Editor
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- antioxidant
- cytoprotection
- chemoprevention
- chronic diseases
- cytoprotective proteins
- mechanism of action
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