4.7 Review

Oxidation Impacts the Intracellular Signaling Machinery in Hematological Disorders

Journal

ANTIOXIDANTS
Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antiox9040353

Keywords

Src family kinases; protein phosphatase; Lyn; red cells; sickle cell disease; chronic lymphocytic leukemia; erythropoiesis; thalassemia; G6PD deficiency

Funding

  1. FUR-UNIVR (LDF)

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The dynamic coordination between kinases and phosphatases is crucial for cell homeostasis, in response to different stresses. The functional connection between oxidation and the intracellular signaling machinery still remains to be investigated. In the last decade, several studies have highlighted the role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) as modulators directly targeting kinases, phosphatases, and downstream modulators, or indirectly acting on cysteine residues on kinases/phosphatases resulting in protein conformational changes with modulation of intracellular signaling pathway(s). Translational studies have revealed the important link between oxidation and signal transduction pathways in hematological disorders. The intricate nature of intracellular signal transduction mechanisms, based on the generation of complex networks of different types of signaling proteins, revealed the novel and important role of phosphatases together with kinases in disease mechanisms. Thus, therapeutic approaches to abnormal signal transduction pathways should consider either inhibition of overactivated/accumulated kinases or homeostatic signaling resetting through the activation of phosphatases. This review discusses the progress in the knowledge of the interplay between oxidation and cell signaling, involving phosphatase/kinase systems in models of globally distributed hematological disorders.

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