3.9 Review

Thiol Redox Transitions in Cell Signaling: a Lesson from N-Acetylcysteine

Journal

THESCIENTIFICWORLDJOURNAL
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages 1192-1202

Publisher

HINDAWI PUBLISHING CORP
DOI: 10.1100/tsw.2010.104

Keywords

antioxidant; c-Src inactivation; differentiation; functional redox switches; gene expression; hydrogen peroxide; junctions; oxidative stress; proliferation; sensitive cysteine

Funding

  1. Iasomai AB, Stockholm, Sweden

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The functional status of cells is under the control of external stimuli affecting the function of critical proteins and eventually gene expression. Signal sensing and transduction by messengers to specific effectors operate by post-translational modification of proteins, among which thiol redox switches play a fundamental role that is just beginning to be understood. The maintenance of the redox status is, indeed, crucial for cellular homeostasis and its dysregulation towards a more oxidized intracellular environment is associated with aberrant proliferation, ultimately related to diseases such as cancer, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes. Redox transitions occur in sensitive cysteine residues of regulatory proteins relevant to signaling, their evolution to metastable disulfides accounting for the functional redox switch. N-acetylcysteine (NAC) is a thiol-containing compound that is able to interfere with redox transitions of thiols and, thus, in principle, able to modulate redox signaling. We here review the redox chemistry of NAC, then screen possible mechanisms to explain the effects observed in NAC-treated normal and cancer cells; such effects involve a modification of global gene expression, thus of functions and morphology, with a leitmotif of a switch from proliferation to terminal differentiation. The regulation of thiol redox transitions in cell signaling is, therefore, proposed as a new tool, holding promise not only for a deeper explanation of mechanisms, but indeed for innovative pharmacological interventions.

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