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result(s) for
"Dyson, Alex"
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Roots : the saga of an American family
by
Haley, Alex, author
,
Dyson, Michael Eric, author of introduction
in
Haley, Alex.
,
Haley, Alex Family.
,
Haley family.
2014
This poignant and powerful narrative tells the dramatic story of Kunta Kinte, snatched from freedom in Africa and brought by ship to America and slavery, and his descendants. Drawing on the oral traditions handed down in his family for generations, the author traces his origins back to the seventeen-year-old Kunta Kinte, who was abducted from his home in Gambia and transported as a slave to colonial America. In this account Haley provides an imaginative rendering of the lives of seven generations of black men and women.
Key bioactive reaction products of the NO/H₂S interaction are S/N-hybrid species, polysulfides, and nitroxyl
by
Grman, Marian
,
Keefer, Larry K.
,
Butler, Anthony R.
in
Animals
,
Biological Availability
,
Biological Sciences
2015
Experimental evidence suggests that nitric oxide (NO) and hydrogen sulfide (H₂S) signaling pathways are intimately intertwined, with mutual attenuation or potentiation of biological responses in the cardiovascular system and elsewhere. The chemical basis of this interaction is elusive. Moreover, polysulfides recently emerged as potential mediators of H₂S/sulfide signaling, but their biosynthesis and relationship to NO remain enigmatic. We sought to characterize the nature, chemical biology, and bioactivity of key reaction products formed in the NO/sulfide system. At physiological pH, we find that NO and sulfide form a network of cascading chemical reactions that generate radical intermediates as well as anionic and uncharged solutes, with accumulation of three major products: nitrosopersulfide (SSNO⁻), polysulfides, and dinitrososulfite [N-nitrosohydroxylamine-N-sulfonate (SULFI/NO)], each with a distinct chemical biology and in vitro and in vivo bioactivity. SSNO⁻ is resistant to thiols and cyanolysis, efficiently donates both sulfane sulfur and NO, and potently lowers blood pressure. Polysulfides are both intermediates and products of SSNO⁻ synthesis/decomposition, and they also decrease blood pressure and enhance arterial compliance. SULFI/NO is a weak combined NO/nitroxyl donor that releases mainly N₂O on decomposition; although it affects blood pressure only mildly, it markedly increases cardiac contractility, and formation of its precursor sulfite likely contributes to NO scavenging. Our results unveil an unexpectedly rich network of coupled chemical reactions between NO and H₂S/sulfide, suggesting that the bioactivity of either transmitter is governed by concomitant formation of polysulfides and anionic S/N-hybrid species. This conceptual framework would seem to offer ample opportunities for the modulation of fundamental biological processes governed by redox switching and sulfur trafficking.
Journal Article
Taming hemoglobin chemistry—a new hemoglobin-based oxygen carrier engineered with both decreased rates of nitric oxide scavenging and lipid oxidation
2024
The clinical utility of hemoglobin-based oxygen carriers (HBOC) is limited by adverse heme oxidative chemistry. A variety of tyrosine residues were inserted on the surface of the γ subunit of recombinant fetal hemoglobin to create novel electron transport pathways. This enhanced the ability of the physiological antioxidant ascorbate to reduce ferryl heme and decrease lipid peroxidation. The γL96Y mutation presented the best profile of oxidative protection unaccompanied by loss of protein stability and function. N-terminal deletions were constructed to facilitate the production of recombinant hemoglobin by fermentation and phenylalanine insertions in the heme pocket to decrease the rate of NO dioxygenation. The resultant mutant (αV1del. αL29F, γG1del. γV67F, γL96Y) significantly decreased NO scavenging and lipid peroxidation in vitro. Unlike native hemoglobin or a recombinant control (αV1del, γG1del), this mutation showed no increase in blood pressure immediately following infusion in a rat model of reperfusion injury, suggesting that it was also able to prevent NO scavenging in vivo. Infusion of the mutant also resulted in no meaningful adverse physiological effects apart from diuresis, and no increase in oxidative stress, as measured by urinary isoprostane levels. Following PEGylation via the Euro-PEG-Hb method to increase vascular retention, this novel protein construct was compared with saline in a severe rat reperfusion injury model (45% blood volume removal for 90 minutes followed by reinfusion to twice the volume of shed blood). Blood pressure and survival were followed for 4 h post-reperfusion. While there was no difference in blood pressure, the PEGylated Hb mutant significantly increased survival.
Tyrosine and Phenylalanine Mutations Create Safer Hemoglobin for Oxygen Delivery
Hemoglobin-based oxygen carriers are modified hemoglobin molecules that can be infused as blood substitutes to replace red blood cell transfusions or as oxygen therapeutics to deliver oxygen to damaged tissues not readily accessible by red cells. However, their clinical use has been limited by adverse side effects caused by free radical production and nitric oxide scavenging by extracellular hemoglobin. The researchers used genetic engineering to insert tyrosine residues into fetal human hemoglobin to decrease radical production and phenylalanine residues to decrease nitric oxide scavenging. The resulting novel hemoglobin was tested in rat models to observe the effects on blood pressure and survival rates. The research offers hope for improved treatment for patients in critical need of blood transfusions or with an otherwise compromised oxygen delivery system, such as in sickle cell disease, stroke or sepsis.
This summary was written by the author.
Journal Article
Ammonium tetrathiomolybdate following ischemia/reperfusion injury: Chemistry, pharmacology, and impact of a new class of sulfide donor in preclinical injury models
by
dos Santos Cardoso, Juliano
,
Sabbatini, Giovanni
,
Pescador Mendonça, Bruna
in
Ammonium
,
Animals
,
Anoxia
2017
Early revascularization of ischemic organs is key to improving outcomes, yet consequent reperfusion injury may be harmful. Reperfusion injury is largely attributed to excess mitochondrial production of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Sulfide inhibits mitochondria and reduces ROS production. Ammonium tetrathiomolybdate (ATTM), a copper chelator, releases sulfide in a controlled and novel manner, and may offer potential therapeutic utility.
In vitro, ATTM releases sulfide in a time-, pH-, temperature-, and thiol-dependent manner. Controlled sulfide release from ATTM reduces metabolism (measured as oxygen consumption) both in vivo in awake rats and ex vivo in skeletal muscle tissue, with a superior safety profile compared to standard sulfide generators. Given intravenously at reperfusion/resuscitation to rats, ATTM significantly reduced infarct size following either myocardial or cerebral ischemia, and conferred survival benefit following severe hemorrhage. Mechanistic studies (in vitro anoxia/reoxygenation) demonstrated a mitochondrial site of action (decreased MitoSOX fluorescence), where the majority of damaging ROS is produced.
The inorganic thiometallate ATTM represents a new class of sulfide-releasing drugs. Our findings provide impetus for further investigation of this compound as a novel adjunct therapy for reperfusion injury.
Journal Article
Selenium and hydrogen selenide: essential micronutrient and the fourth gasotransmitter?
by
Samra, Kavitej
,
Evans, Eloise
,
Dyson, Alex
in
Critical Care Medicine
,
Gaseous Mediators
,
Hydrogen
2019
Selenium (Se) is an essential micronutrient required by organisms of diverse lineage. Dietary Se is converted to hydrogen selenide either enzymatically or by endogenous antioxidant proteins. This convergent biochemical step crucially underlies the subsequent biological activity of Se and argues for inclusion of hydrogen selenide as the fourth endogenous gasotransmitter alongside nitric oxide, carbon monoxide and hydrogen sulfide.
Endogenously generated hydrogen selenide is incorporated into numerous ‘selenoprotein’ oxidoreductase enzymes, essential for maintaining redox-status homeostasis in health and disease. Direct effects of endogenous hydrogen selenide on cellular and molecular targets are currently unknown. Given exogenously, hydrogen selenide acts as a modulator of metabolism via transient inhibition of mitochondrial cytochrome C oxidase. Here we provide an overview of Se biology, its impact on several physiological systems (immune, endocrine, cardiovascular and metabolic) and its utility as a supplement in acute and critical illness states. We further explore the evidence base supporting its role as the fourth gasotransmitter and propose a strategic case towards generation of novel selenomimetic therapeutics.
Journal Article
Liver Dysfunction and Phosphatidylinositol-3-Kinase Signalling in Early Sepsis: Experimental Studies in Rodent Models of Peritonitis
2012
Hepatic dysfunction and jaundice are traditionally viewed as late features of sepsis and portend poor outcomes. We hypothesized that changes in liver function occur early in the onset of sepsis, yet pass undetected by standard laboratory tests.
In a long-term rat model of faecal peritonitis, biotransformation and hepatobiliary transport were impaired, depending on subsequent disease severity, as early as 6 h after peritoneal contamination. Phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase (PI3K) signalling was simultaneously induced at this time point. At 15 h there was hepatocellular accumulation of bilirubin, bile acids, and xenobiotics, with disturbed bile acid conjugation and drug metabolism. Cholestasis was preceded by disruption of the bile acid and organic anion transport machinery at the canalicular pole. Inhibitors of PI3K partially prevented cytokine-induced loss of villi in cultured HepG2 cells. Notably, mice lacking the PI3Kγ gene were protected against cholestasis and impaired bile acid conjugation. This was partially confirmed by an increase in plasma bile acids (e.g., chenodeoxycholic acid [CDCA] and taurodeoxycholic acid [TDCA]) observed in 48 patients on the day severe sepsis was diagnosed; unlike bilirubin (area under the receiver-operating curve: 0.59), these bile acids predicted 28-d mortality with high sensitivity and specificity (area under the receiver-operating curve: CDCA: 0.77; TDCA: 0.72; CDCA+TDCA: 0.87).
Liver dysfunction is an early and commonplace event in the rat model of sepsis studied here; PI3K signalling seems to play a crucial role. All aspects of hepatic biotransformation are affected, with severity relating to subsequent prognosis. Detected changes significantly precede conventional markers and are reflected by early alterations in plasma bile acids. These observations carry important implications for the diagnosis of liver dysfunction and pharmacotherapy in the critically ill. Further clinical work is necessary to extend these concepts into clinical practice. Please see later in the article for the Editors' Summary.
Journal Article
Neuroprotective effects of ammonium tetrathiomolybdate, a slow-release sulfide donor, in a rodent model of regional stroke
by
Manfredini Andressa
,
Vieira, Ana Carolina
,
Dyson, Alex
in
Enzymes
,
Injury prevention
,
Intensive care
2020
BackgroundSeveral therapeutic strategies to rescue the brain from ischemic injury have improved outcomes after stroke; however, there is no treatment as yet for reperfusion injury, the secondary damage caused by necessary revascularization. Recently we characterized ammonium tetrathiomolybdate (ATTM), a drug used as a copper chelator over many decades in humans, as a new class of sulfide donor that shows efficacy in preclinical injury models. We hypothesized that ATTM could confer neuroprotection in a relevant rodent model of regional stroke.Methods and resultsBrain ischemia was induced by transient (90-min) middle cerebral artery occlusion (tMCAO) in anesthetized Wistar rats. To mimic a clinical scenario, ATTM (or saline) was administered intravenously just prior to reperfusion. At 24 h or 7 days post-reperfusion, rats were assessed using functional (rotarod test, spontaneous locomotor activity), histological (infarct size), and molecular (anti-oxidant enzyme capacity, oxidative damage, and inflammation) outcome measurements. ATTM-treated animals showed improved functional activity at both 24 h and 7-days post-reperfusion, in parallel with a significant reduction in infarct size. These effects were additionally associated with increased brain antioxidant enzyme capacity, decreased oxidative damage, and a late (7-day) effect on pro-inflammatory cytokine levels and nitric oxide products.ConclusionATTM confers significant neuroprotection that, along with its known safety profile in humans, provides encouragement for its development as a novel adjunct therapy for revascularization following stroke.
Journal Article
The metabolic phenotype of rodent sepsis: cause for concern?
by
Zolfaghari, Parjam S
,
Pinto, Bernardo Bollen
,
Dyson, Alex
in
Critical Care Medicine
,
Intensive
,
Medicine
2013
Purpose
Rodent models of sepsis are frequently used to investigate pathophysiological mechanisms and to evaluate putative therapeutic strategies. However, preclinical efficacy in these models has failed to translate to the clinical setting. We thus questioned the representativeness of such models and herein report a detailed comparison of the metabolic and cardiovascular phenotypes of long-term faecal peritonitis in fluid-resuscitated rats and mice with similar mortality profiles.
Methods
We conducted prospective laboratory-controlled studies in adult male Wistar rats and C57 black mice. Animals were made septic by intraperitoneal injection of faecal slurry. Rats received continuous intravenous fluid resuscitation, whereas mice received intermittent fluid boluses subcutaneously. Sham-treated animals served as controls. Survival was assessed over 72 h. In separate studies, whole body metabolism (O
2
consumption, CO
2
production) was measured over 24 h with echocardiography performed at early (6 h) and established (24 h) phases of sepsis. Blood gas analysis was performed at 6 h (rats) and 24 h (rats, mice).
Results
Similar survival curves were seen in both rodent models with approximately 75% mortality at 72 h. In mice, sepsis caused severity-dependent falls in core temperature and global metabolism. Oxygen consumption in severely septic mice fell by 38% within 2 h, and 80% at 22 h compared with baseline values. This was only partially restored by external warming. By contrast, septic rats maintained core temperature; only severely affected animals showed a pre-mortem decline in oxygen consumption. Significant myocardial dysfunction was seen in mice during early and established sepsis, whereas peak velocity and other hemodynamic variables in rats were similar at 6 h and significantly worse by 24 h in severely septic animals only.
Conclusions
Markedly differing metabolic and cardiovascular profiles were seen in long-term fluid-resuscitated rat and mouse models of bacterial sepsis despite similar mortality. The mouse model, in particular, does not represent the human condition. We urge caution in applying findings in murine models to septic patients, both with regard to our understanding of pathophysiology and the failure to translate preclinical efficacy into successful clinical trials.
Journal Article
The Pharmacology and Therapeutic Utility of Sodium Hydroselenide
by
Samra, Kavitej
,
Smith, William
,
Dyson, Alex
in
Animals
,
Antioxidants - pharmacology
,
Antioxidants - therapeutic use
2021
Metabolically active gasotransmitters (nitric oxide, carbon monoxide and hydrogen sulfide) are important signalling molecules that show therapeutic utility in oxidative pathologies. The reduced form of selenium, hydrogen selenide (HSe−/H2Se), shares some characteristics with these molecules. The simple selenide salt, sodium hydroselenide (NaHSe) showed significant metabolic activity, dose-dependently decreasing ex vivo O2 consumption (rat soleus muscle, liver) and transiently inhibiting mitochondrial cytochrome C oxidase (liver, heart). Pharmacological manipulation of selenoprotein expression in HepG2 human hepatocytes revealed that the oxidation status of selenium impacts on protein expression; reduced selenide (NaHSe) increased, whereas (oxidized) sodium selenite decreased the abundance of two ubiquitous selenoproteins. An inhibitor of endogenous sulfide production (DL-propargylglycine; PAG) also reduced selenoprotein expression; this was reversed by exogenous NaHSe, but not sodium hydrosulfide (NaHS). NaHSe also conferred cytoprotection against an oxidative challenge (H2O2), and this was associated with an increase in mitochondrial membrane potential. Anesthetized Wistar rats receiving intravenous NaHSe exhibited significant bradycardia, metabolic acidosis and hyperlactataemia. In summary, NaHSe modulates metabolism by inhibition of cytochrome C oxidase. Modification of selenoprotein expression revealed the importance of oxidation status of selenium therapies, with implications for current clinical practice. The utility of NaHSe as a research tool and putative therapeutic is discussed.
Journal Article
Temporal changes in tissue cardiorespiratory function during faecal peritonitis
by
Dyson, Alex
,
Singer, Mervyn
,
Rudiger, Alain
in
Analysis
,
Analysis of Variance
,
Anesthesia. Intensive care medicine. Transfusions. Cell therapy and gene therapy
2011
Purpose
Sepsis affects both macro- and micro-circulatory transport of oxygen to tissues, causing regional hypoxia. However, this relationship is poorly characterized with respect to inter-organ variability, disease severity and the evolution to organ dysfunction. We hypothesized that an early circulatory insult precedes the development of organ dysfunction, and is more severe in predicted non-survivors. Consequently, we assessed temporal changes in myocardial function and regional tissue oxygenation in peripheral and deep organs in a rat model of faecal peritonitis. We also examined the utility of a dynamic oxygen challenge test to assess the microcirculation.
Methods
Awake, tethered, fluid-resuscitated male Wistar rats were randomized to receive intraperitoneal injection of faecal slurry, or to act as controls. At either 6 or 24 h post insult, rats were anaesthetized and underwent echocardiography, arterial cannulation and placement of tissue oxygen probes in peripheral (muscle, bladder) and deep (liver and renal cortex) organ beds. Measurements were repeated during fluid loading and an oxygen challenge test (administration of high oxygen concentrations).
Results
Early sepsis (6 h) was characterized by a fall in global oxygen delivery with concurrent decreases in muscle, renal cortical and, especially, liver tissue PO
2
. By contrast, during established sepsis (24 h), myocardial and circulatory function had largely recovered despite increasing clinical unwellness, hyperlactataemia and biochemical evidence of organ failure. O
2
challenge revealed an early depression of response that, by 24 h, had improved in all organ beds bar the kidney.
Conclusions
This long-term septic model exhibited an early decline in tissue oxygenation, the degree of which related to predicted mortality. Clinical and biochemical deterioration, however, progressed despite cardiovascular recovery. Early circulatory dysfunction may thus be an important trigger for downstream processes that result in multi-organ failure. Furthermore, the utility of tissue PO
2
monitoring to highlight the local oxygen supply–demand balance, and dynamic O
2
challenge testing to assess microcirculatory function merit further investigation.
Journal Article