Physiology and Pathophysiology of Oxygen Sensitivity
A special issue of Antioxidants (ISSN 2076-3921). This special issue belongs to the section "Health Outcomes of Antioxidants and Oxidative Stress".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 April 2021) | Viewed by 33185
Special Issue Editors
Interests: oxygen sensing; carotid body; chemoreception; signalling pathways; hypoxia; intermittent hypoxia; neurotransmitters; reactive oxygen species; endothelial dysfunction
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: oxygen sensing; hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction; reactive oxygen species; hydrogen sulphide; pulmonary hypertension
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Oxygen is such an essential element for life that multiple mechanisms have evolved to maintain oxygen homeostasis, including the ability of cells to detect and adapt to decreases in arterial O2. In mammals, O2 sensing mechanisms in erythropoietin-producing cells, peripheral chemoreceptor cells (carotid and aortic bodies), pulmonary artery smooth muscle and endothelial cells, chromaffin cells, and some types of neurons are particularly important in maintaining homeostasis.
Although acute O2 sensing by the carotid body (CB) and pulmonary vasculature initiates responses which allow the body to maintain adequate levels of blood oxygenation in the face of systemic hypoxemia and alveolar hypoxia, respectively, during chronic or long-term intermittent hypoxia, these responses evolve to become maladaptive. Continued CB stimulation leads to metabolic and cardiorespiratory disorders such as hypertension and heart failure, and sustained lung hypoxia causes pulmonary hypertension. Although much remains to be discovered about the mechanisms causing both the initial adaptive and subsequent deleterious responses to hypoxia, there is evidence from many laboratories for an essential role of oxidative stress at both stages.
This Special Issue will include a selection of research papers and review articles related to O2 sensing and oxidative stress, physiological responses to acute or chronic hypoxia, and maladaptive responses to the hypoxic environment and their more recent translational implications. We are currently seeking to expand the content of the Issue and would welcome the submission of up-to-date review articles and experimental papers.
We dedicate this Special Issue to our colleagues who made important contributions to the field of chemoreception and particularly to our understanding of the CB and who have passed away in the last decade: Prof. Sukhamay Lahiri (2009), Prof. Constancio Gonzalez (2015), Prof. Machiko Shirahata (2016), and Prof. Chris Peers (2018). We may have lost them, but their legacy continues through the research of many scientific heirs, students, collaborators, and friends.
Prof. Dr. Asuncion Rocher
Dr. Philip I. Aaronson
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- oxygen sensing
- acute and chronic hypoxia
- chemoreception
- carotid body
- pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells
- pulmonary artery endothelial cells
- HIF-1
- oxidative stress
- chemosensory potentiation
- hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction
- pulmonary hypertension
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