P. Venditti
University of Naples Federico II
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Featured researches published by P. Venditti.
Neurosignals | 2001
Sergio Di Meo; P. Venditti
In recent years it has been suggested that reactive oxygen species (ROS) are involved in the damage to muscle and other tissues induced by acute exercise. Despite the small availability of direct evidence for ROS production during exercise, there is an abundance of literature providing indirect support that oxidative stress occurs during exercise. The electron transport associated with the mitochondrial respiratory chain is considered the major process leading to ROS production at rest and during exercise. It is widely assumed that during exercise the increased electron flow through the mitochondrial electron transport chain leads to an increased rate of ROS production. On the other hand, results obtained by in vitro experiments indicate that mitochondrial ROS production is lower in state 3 (ADP-stimulated) than in state 4 (basal) respiration. It is possible, however, that factors, such as temperature, that are modified in vivo during intense physical activity induce changes (uncoupling associated with loss of cytochrome oxidase activity) leading to increased ROS production. The mitochondrial respiratory chain could also be a potential source of ROS in tissues, such as liver, kidney and nonworking muscles, that during exercise undergo partial ischemia because of reduced blood supply. Sufficient oxygen is available to interact with the increasingly reduced respiratory chain and enhance the ROS generation. At the cessation of exercise, blood flow to hypoxic tissues resumes leading to their reoxygenation. This mimics the ischemia-reperfusion phenomenon, which is known to cause excessive production of free radicals. Apart from a theoretical rise in ROS, there is little evidence that exercise-induced oxidative stress is due to its increased mitochondrial generation. On the other hand, if mitochondrial production of ROS supplies a remarkable contribution to exercise-induced oxidative stress, mitochondria should be a primary target of oxidative damage. Unfortunately, there are controversial reports concerning the exercise effects on structural and functional characteristics of mitochondria. However, the isolation of mitochondrial fractions by differential centrifugation has shown that the amount of damaged mitochondria, recovered in the lightest fraction, is remarkably increased by long-lasting exercise.
Mitochondrion | 2013
P. Venditti; Lisa Di Stefano; Sergio Di Meo
For a long time mitochondria have mainly been considered for their role in the aerobic energy production in eukaryotic cells, being the sites of the oxidative phosphorylation, which couples the electron transfer from respiratory substrates to oxygen with the ATP synthesis. Subsequently, it was showed that electron transfer along mitochondrial respiratory chain also leads to the formation of radicals and other reactive oxygen species, commonly indicated as ROS. The finding that such species are able to damage cellular components, suggested mitochondrial involvement in degenerative processes underlying several diseases and aging. More recently, a new role for mitochondria, as a system able to supply protection against cellular oxidative damage, is emerging. Experimental evidence indicates that the systems, evolved to protect mitochondria against endogenously produced ROS, can also scavenge ROS produced by other cellular sources. It is possible that this action, particularly relevant in physio-pathological conditions leading to increased cellular ROS production, is more effective in tissues provided with abundant mitochondrial population. Moreover, the mitochondrial dysfunction, resulting from ROS-induced inactivation of important mitochondrial components, can be attenuated by the cell purification from old ROS-overproducing mitochondria, which are characterized by high susceptibility to oxidative damage. Such an elimination is likely due to two sequential processes, named mitoptosis and mitophagy, which are usually believed to be induced by enhanced mitochondrial ROS generation. However, they could also be elicited by great amounts of ROS produced by other cellular sources and diffusing into mitochondria, leading to the elimination of the old dysfunctional mitochondrial subpopulation.
Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2003
P. Venditti; Raffaella De Rosa; Sergio Di Meo
It has been suggested that activation of mitochondrial respiration by thyroid hormone results in oxidative tissue injury secondary to increased reactive oxygen species production. In order to throw light on this subject, the effects of thyroid state on O2 consumption and H2O2 release by rat liver mitochondria were investigated. Hypothyroidism decreased the rates of O2 consumption and H2O2 release by succinate or pyruvate/malate-supplemented mitochondria during both State 4 and State 3 respiration, whereas hyperthyroidism increased such rates. Conversely, with both substrates and during either respiration phase, the percentage of O2 released as H2O2 was not significantly affected by thyroid state. On the other hand, the capacity of mitochondria to remove H2O2 increased by about 17% in hyperthyroid rats and decreased by about 35% in hypothyroid ones. This result indicates that the ratio between H2O2 production and release and so the percentage of O2 turned into H2O2 instead of being reduced to water increase in the transition from hypothyroid to hyperthyroid state. In light of previous observations that mitochondrial content of cytochromes and ubiquinone also increases in such a transition, the modifications of H2O2 production appear to be due to a modulation by thyroid hormone of the mitochondrial content of the autoxidisable electron carriers. This view is supported by measurements of H2O2 release in the presence of respiratory inhibitors, which show that the thyroid state-linked changes in H2O2 production occur at H2O2 generator sites of both Complex I and Complex III.
Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity | 2016
Sergio Di Meo; Tanea T. Reed; P. Venditti; Victor M. Victor
There is significant evidence that, in living systems, free radicals and other reactive oxygen and nitrogen species play a double role, because they can cause oxidative damage and tissue dysfunction and serve as molecular signals activating stress responses that are beneficial to the organism. Mitochondria have been thought to both play a major role in tissue oxidative damage and dysfunction and provide protection against excessive tissue dysfunction through several mechanisms, including stimulation of opening of permeability transition pores. Until recently, the functional significance of ROS sources different from mitochondria has received lesser attention. However, the most recent data, besides confirming the mitochondrial role in tissue oxidative stress and protection, show interplay between mitochondria and other ROS cellular sources, so that activation of one can lead to activation of other sources. Thus, it is currently accepted that in various conditions all cellular sources of ROS provide significant contribution to processes that oxidatively damage tissues and assure their survival, through mechanisms such as autophagy and apoptosis.
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 1996
S. Di Meo; P. Venditti; T. De Leo
We used an enhanced luminescence technique to study the response of rat tissues, such as liver, heart, muscle and blood, to oxidative stress and to determine their antioxidant capacity. As previously found for liver homogenate, the intensity of light emission (E) of tissue homogenates and blood samples, stressed with sodium perborate, is dependent on concentration, and the dose-response curves can be described by the equation E=a·C/exp(b·C). Theb value depends on the antioxidant defence capability of the tissues. In fact, it increases when homogenates are supplemented with an antioxidant, and is correlated with tissue antioxidant capacity, evaluated by two previously set up methods both using the same luminescence technique. Our results indicate that the order of antioxidant capacity of the tissues is liver>blood>heart>muscle. Thea value depends on the systems catalysing the production of radical species. In fact, it is related to the tissue level of hemoproteins, which are known to act as catalysts in radical production from hydroperoxides. The equation proposed to describe the dose-response relation is simple to handle and permits an immediate connection with the two characteristics of the systems analysed which determine their response to the pro-oxidant treatment. However, the equation which best describes the above relation for all the tissues is the following: E=α·C/exp(β·Cδ). The parameter δ assumes values smaller than 1, which seem to depend on relative amounts of tissue hemoproteins and antioxidants. The extension of the analysis to mitochondria shows that they respond to oxidative stress in a way analogous to the tissues, and that the adherence of the dose-response curve to the course predicted from the equation E=a·C/exp(b·C) is again dependent on hemoprotein content.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Blanda Di Luccia; Raffaella Crescenzo; Arianna Mazzoli; Luisa Cigliano; P. Venditti; Jean-Claude Walser; Alex Widmer; Loredana Baccigalupi; Ezio Ricca; Susanna Iossa
A fructose-rich diet can induce metabolic syndrome, a combination of health disorders that increases the risk of diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Diet is also known to alter the microbial composition of the gut, although it is not clear whether such alteration contributes to the development of metabolic syndrome. The aim of this work was to assess the possible link between the gut microbiota and the development of diet-induced metabolic syndrome in a rat model of obesity. Rats were fed either a standard or high-fructose diet. Groups of fructose-fed rats were treated with either antibiotics or faecal samples from control rats by oral gavage. Body composition, plasma metabolic parameters and markers of tissue oxidative stress were measured in all groups. A 16S DNA-sequencing approach was used to evaluate the bacterial composition of the gut of animals under different diets. The fructose-rich diet induced markers of metabolic syndrome, inflammation and oxidative stress, that were all significantly reduced when the animals were treated with antibiotic or faecal samples. The number of members of two bacterial genera, Coprococcus and Ruminococcus, was increased by the fructose-rich diet and reduced by both antibiotic and faecal treatments, pointing to a correlation between their abundance and the development of the metabolic syndrome. Our data indicate that in rats fed a fructose-rich diet the development of metabolic syndrome is directly correlated with variations of the gut content of specific bacterial taxa.
Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2003
P. Venditti; Raffaella De Rosa; Sergio Di Meo
The effects of the thyroid state on oxidative damage, antioxidant capacity, susceptibility to in vitro oxidative stress and Ca(2+)-induced permeabilization of mitochondria from rat tissues (liver, heart, and gastrocnemious muscle) were examined. Hypothyroidism was induced by administering methimazole in drinking water for 15 d. Hyperthyroidism was elicited by a 10 d treatment of hypothyroid rats with triiodothyronine (10 micro g/100 g body weight). Mitochondrial levels of hydroperoxides and protein-bound carbonyls significantly decreased in hypothyroid tissues and were reported above euthroid values in hypothyroid rats after T(3) treatment. Mitochondrial vitamin E levels were not affected by changes of animal thyroid state. Mitochondrial Coenzyme Q9 levels decreased in liver and heart from hypothyroid rats and increased in all hyperthyroid tissues, while Coenzyme Q10 levels decreased in hypothyroid liver and increased in all hyperthyroid tissues. The antioxidant capacity of mitochondria was not significantly different in hypothyroid and euthyroid tissues, whereas it decreased in the hyperthyroid ones. Susceptibility to in vitro oxidative challenge decreased in mitochondria from hypothyroid tissues and increased in mitochondria from hyperthyroid tissues, while susceptibility to Ca(2+)-induced swelling decreased only in hypothyroid liver mitochondria and increased in mitochondria from all hyperthyroid tissues. The tissue-dependence of the mitochondrial susceptibility to stressful conditions in altered thyroid states can be explained by different thyroid hormone-induced changes in mitochondrial ROS production and relative amounts of mitochondrial hemoproteins and antioxidants. We suggest that susceptibilities to oxidants and Ca(2+)-induced swelling may have important implications for the thyroid hormone regulation of the turnover of proteins and whole mitochondria, respectively.
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2001
P. Venditti; P. Masullo; S. Di Meo
Abstract. We investigated the effects of ischemia duration on the functional response of mitochondria to reperfusion and its relationship with changes in mitochondrial susceptibility to oxidative stress. Mitochondria were isolated from hearts perfused by the Langendorff technique immediately after different periods of global ischemia or reperfusion following such ischemia periods. Rates of O2 consumption and H2O2 release with complex I- and complex II-linked substrates, lipid peroxidation, overall antioxidant capacity, capacity to remove H2O2, and susceptibility to oxidative stress were determined. The effects of ischemia on some parameters were time dependent so that the changes were greater after 45 than after 20 min of ischemia, or were significantly different to the nonischemic control only after 45 min of ischemia. Thus, succinate-supported state 3 respiration exhibited a significant decrease after 20 min of ischemia and a greater decrease after 45 min, while pyruvate malate-supported respiration showed a significant decrease only after 45 min of ischemia, indicating an ischemia-induced early inhibition of complex II and a late inhibition of complex I. Furthermore, both succinate and pyruvate malate-supported H2O2 release showed significant increases only after 45 min of ischemia. Similarly, whole antioxidant capacity significantly increased and susceptibility to oxidants significantly decreased after 45 min of ischemia. Such changes were likely due to the accumulation of reducing equivalents, which are able to remove peroxides and maintain thiols in a reduced state. This condition, which protects mitochondria against oxidants, increases mitochondrial production of oxyradicals and oxidative damage during reperfusion. This could explain the smaller functional recovery of the tissue and the further decline of the mitochondrial function after reperfusion following the longer period of oxygen deprivation.
Cardiovascular Research | 1998
P. Venditti; M Balestrieri; T. De Leo; S Di Meo
OBJECTIVE This work was designed to determine whether the doxorubicin-induced changes in heart electrical activity are due to increased free radical production and membrane oxidative damage. METHODS Four groups of rats (60 days old) were used. One group was untreated and the others were treated with doxorubicin (DXR), DXR and vitamin E, and DXR and N-acetylcysteine (NAC), respectively. DXR was administered by single i.p. injection (20 mg/kg b.wt.). Vitamin E was administered by ten daily i.m. injections (100 mg/kg), while NAC (100 mg/kg) was injected i.p. 1 h before and 7 h after DXR. The effectiveness of the drug in inducing oxidative stress in different tissues and of the antioxidants in offering protection was established by determining antioxidant capacity, susceptibility to oxidative stress, and lipid peroxidation in heart, liver, and blood. The drug effect on heart electrical activity was determined by measuring the heart rate in vivo and action potential configuration in papillary muscle fibres in vitro. Heart lipid peroxidation and electrical activity were also examined in both vitamin E and NAC-treated rats. RESULTS DXR treatment decreased antioxidant capacity and increased lipid peroxidation and susceptibility to oxidative stress in heart and blood, but not in liver. DXR administration to rats treated with antioxidants did not produce significant changes in antioxidant capacity and susceptibility to oxidative stress even in heart and blood. Furthermore, lipid peroxidation in heart and liver from DXR- and vitamin E-treated rats, and in liver from DXR- and NAC-treated rats was lower than in untreated controls. DXR treatment also increased the duration of ventricular action potentials in untreated rats, but not in antioxidant-treated rats. The treatment of control animals with the antioxidants affected lipid peroxidation, but not cardiac electrical activity. CONCLUSIONS The protection offered by antioxidants against electrophysiological alterations indicates a free radical involvement in such alterations. In contrast, although electrical modifications are associated with increased peroxidative processes and both are prevented by the antioxidants, it is not yet clear whether a causative relationship exists between them.
The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2006
P. Venditti; R. Pamplona; V. Ayala; R. De Rosa; G. Caldarone; S. Di Meo
SUMMARY Thyroid hormone-induced increase in metabolic rates is often associated with increased oxidative stress. The aim of the present study was to investigate the contribution of iodothyronines to liver oxidative stress in the functional hyperthyroidism elicited by cold, using as models cold-exposed and 3,5,3′-triiodothyronine (T3)- or thyroxine (T4)-treated rats. The hyperthyroid state was always associated with increases in both oxidative capacity and oxidative damage of the tissue. The most extensive damage to lipids and proteins was found in T3-treated and cold-exposed rats, respectively. Increase in oxygen reactive species released by mitochondria and microsomes was found to contribute to tissue oxidative damage, whereas the determination of single antioxidants did not provide information about the possible contribution of a reduced effectiveness of the antioxidant defence system. Indeed, liver oxidative damage in hyperthyroid rats was scarcely related to levels of the liposoluble antioxidants and activities of antioxidant enzymes. Conversely, other biochemical changes, such as the degree of fatty acid unsaturation and hemoprotein content, appeared to predispose hepatic tissue to oxidative damage associated with oxidative challenge elicited by hyperthyroid state. As a whole, our results confirm the idea that T3 plays a key role in metabolic changes and oxidative damage found in cold liver. However, only data concerning changes in glutathione peroxidase activity and mitochondrial protein content favour the idea that dissimilarities in effects of cold exposure and T3 treatment could depend on differences in serum levels of T4.