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  •   University of Thessaly Institutional Repository
  • Επιστημονικές Δημοσιεύσεις Μελών ΠΘ (ΕΔΠΘ)
  • Δημοσιεύσεις σε περιοδικά, συνέδρια, κεφάλαια βιβλίων κλπ.
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  •   University of Thessaly Institutional Repository
  • Επιστημονικές Δημοσιεύσεις Μελών ΠΘ (ΕΔΠΘ)
  • Δημοσιεύσεις σε περιοδικά, συνέδρια, κεφάλαια βιβλίων κλπ.
  • View Item
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Principles for integrating reactive species into in vivo biological processes: Examples from exercise physiology

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Author
Margaritelis N.V., Cobley J.N., Paschalis V., Veskoukis A.S., Theodorou A.A., Kyparos A., Nikolaidis M.G.
Date
2016
Language
en
DOI
10.1016/j.cellsig.2015.12.011
Keyword
antioxidant
oxidizing agent
reactive species
unclassified drug
reactive oxygen metabolite
binding affinity
cell activity
exercise physiology
human
in vivo study
nonhuman
oxidation reduction reaction
priority journal
protein binding
protein domain
protein function
protein modification
protein processing
Review
signal transduction
exercise
metabolism
physiology
Antioxidants
Exercise
Humans
Oxidation-Reduction
Reactive Oxygen Species
Signal Transduction
Elsevier Inc.
Metadata display
Abstract
The equivocal role of reactive species and redox signaling in exercise responses and adaptations is an example clearly showing the inadequacy of current redox biology research to shed light on fundamental biological processes in vivo. Part of the answer probably relies on the extreme complexity of the in vivo redox biology and the limitations of the currently applied methodological and experimental tools. We propose six fundamental principles that should be considered in future studies to mechanistically link reactive species production to exercise responses or adaptations: 1) identify and quantify the reactive species, 2) determine the potential signaling properties of the reactive species, 3) detect the sources of reactive species, 4) locate the domain modified and verify the (ir)reversibility of post-translational modifications, 5) establish causality between redox and physiological measurements, 6) use selective and targeted antioxidants. Fulfilling these principles requires an idealized human experimental setting, which is certainly a utopia. Thus, researchers should choose to satisfy those principles, which, based on scientific evidence, are most critical for their specific research question. © 2015 Elsevier Inc.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11615/76346
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  • Δημοσιεύσεις σε περιοδικά, συνέδρια, κεφάλαια βιβλίων κλπ. [19735]

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