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Dive into the research topics where Rosa M. Sainz is active.

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Featured researches published by Rosa M. Sainz.


Journal of Pineal Research | 2004

Regulation of antioxidant enzymes: a significant role for melatonin

Carmen Rodríguez; Juan C. Mayo; Rosa M. Sainz; Isaac Antolín; Federico Herrera; Vanesa Martín; Russel J. Reiter

Abstract: Antioxidant enzymes form the first line of defense against free radicals in organisms. Their regulation depends mainly on the oxidant status of the cell, given that oxidants are their principal modulators. However, other factors have been reported to increase antioxidant enzyme activity and/or gene expression. During the last decade, the antioxidant melatonin has been shown to possess genomic actions, regulating the expression of several genes. Melatonin also influences both antioxidant enzyme activity and cellular mRNA levels for these enzymes. In the present report, we review the studies which document the influence of melatonin on the activity and expression of the antioxidative enzymes glutathione peroxidase, superoxide dismutases and catalase both under physiological and under conditions of elevated oxidative stress. We also analyze the possible mechanisms by which melatonin regulates these enzymes.


Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry | 2002

CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL PROPERTIES AND POTENTIAL MECHANISMS: MELATONIN AS A BROAD SPECTRUM ANTIOXIDANT AND FREE RADICAL SCAVENGER

Dun Xian Tan; Russel J. Reiter; Lucien C. Manchester; Mei ting Yan; Mamdouh R. El-Sawi; Rosa M. Sainz; Juan C. Mayo; Ron Kohen; Mario Allegra; Rüdiger Hardeland

Melatonin was found to be a potent free radical scavenger in 1993. Since then over 800 publications have directly or indirectly confirmed this observation. Melatonin scavenges a variety of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species including hydroxyl radical, hydrogen peroxide, singlet oxygen, nitric oxide and peroxynitrite anion. Based on the analyses of structure-activity relationships, the indole moiety of the melatonin molecule is the reactive center of interaction with oxidants due to its high resonance stability and very low activation energy barrier towards the free radical reactions. However, the methoxy and amide side chains also contribute significantly to melatonins antioxidant capacity. The N-C=O structure in the C3 amide side chain is the functional group. The carbonyl group in the structure of N-C=O is key for melatonin to scavenge the second reactive species and the nitrogen in the N-C=O structure is necessary for melatonin to form the new five membered ring after melatonins interaction with a reactive species. The methoxy group in C5 appears to keep melatonin from exhibiting prooxidative activity. If the methoxy group is replaced by a hydroxyl group, under some in vitro conditions, the antioxidant capacity of this molecule may be enhanced. However, the cost of this change are decreased lipophility and increased prooxidative potential. Therefore, in in vivo studies the antioxidant efficacy of melatonin appears to be superior to its hydroxylated counterpart. The mechanisms of melatonins interaction with reactive species probably involves donation of an electron to form the melatoninyl cation radical or through an radical addition at the site C3. Other possibilities include hydrogen donation from the nitrogen atom or substitution at position C2, C4 and C7 and nitrosation. Melatonin also has the ability to repair damaged biomolecules as shown by the fact that it converts the guanosine radical to guanosine by electron transfer. Unlike the classical antioxidants, melatonin is devoid of prooxidative activity and all known intermediates generated by the interaction of melatonin with reactive species are also free radical scavengers. This phenomenon is defined as the free radical scavenging cascade reaction of the melatonin family. Due to this cascade, one melatonin molecule has the potential to scavenge up to 4 or more reactive species. This makes melatonin very effective as an antioxidant. Under in vivo conditions, melatonin is often several times more potent than vitamin C and E in protecting tissues from oxidative injury when compared at an equivalent dosage (micromol/kg). Future research in the field of melatonin as a free radical scavenger might be focused on: 1), signal transduction and antioxidant enzyme gene expression induced by melatonin and its metabolites, 2), melatonin levels in tissues and in cells, 3), melatonin structure modifications, 4), melatonin and its metabolites in plants and, 5), clinical trials using melatonin to treat free radical related diseases such as Alzheimers, Parkinsons, stroke and heart disease.


Journal of Pineal Research | 2003

Melatonin : A hormone, a tissue factor, an autocoid, a paracoid, and an antioxidant vitamin

Dun Xian Tan; Lucien C. Manchester; Rüdiger Hardeland; Silvia Lopez-Burillo; Juan C. Mayo; Rosa M. Sainz; Russel J. Reiter

Abstract: Melatonin, a derivative of an essential amino acid, tryptophan, was first identified in bovine pineal tissue and subsequently it has been portrayed exclusively as a hormone. Recently accumulated evidence has challenged this concept. Melatonin is present in the earliest life forms and is found in all organisms including bacteria, algae, fungi, plants, insects, and vertebrates including humans. Several characteristics of melatonin distinguish it from a classic hormone such as its direct, non‐receptor‐mediated free radical scavenging activity. As melatonin is also ingested in foodstuffs such as vegetables, fruits, rice, wheat and herbal medicines, from the nutritional point of view, melatonin can also be classified as a vitamin. It seems likely that melatonin initially evolved as an antioxidant, becoming a vitamin in the food chain, and in multicellular organisms, where it is produced, it has acquired autocoid, paracoid and hormonal properties.


Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology | 2002

Melatonin: reducing the toxicity and increasing the efficacy of drugs.

Russel J. Reiter; Dun Xian Tan; Rosa M. Sainz; Juan C. Mayo; Silvia Lopez-Burillo

Melatonin (N‐acetyl‐5‐methoxytryptamine) is a molecule with a very wide phylogenetic distribution from plants to man. In vertebrates, melatonin was initially thought to be exclusively of pineal origin; recent studies have shown, however, that melatonin synthesis may occur in a variety of cells and organs. The concentration of melatonin within body fluids and subcellular compartments varies widely, with blood levels of the indole being lower than those at many other sites. Thus, when defining what constitutes a physiological level of melatonin, it must be defined relative to a specific compartment. Melatonin has been shown to have a variety of functions, and research in the last decade has proven the indole to be both a direct free radical scavenger and indirect antioxidant. Because of these actions, and possibly others that remain to be defined, melatonin has been shown to reduce the toxicity and increase the efficacy of a large number of drugs whose side effects are well documented. Herein, we summarize the beneficial effects of melatonin when combined with the following drugs: doxorubicin, cisplatin, epirubicin, cytarabine, bleomycin, gentamicin, ciclosporin, indometacin, acetylsalicylic acid, ranitidine, omeprazole, isoniazid, iron and erythropoietin, pheno‐barbital, carbamazepine, haloperidol, caposide‐50, morphine, cyclophosphamide and l‐cysteine. While the majority of these studies were conducted using animals, a number of the investigations also used man. Considering the low toxicity of melatonin and its ability to reduce the side effects and increase the efficacy of these drugs, its use as a combination therapy with these agents seems important and worthy of pursuit.


Journal of Pineal Research | 2016

Melatonin as an antioxidant: under promises but over delivers

Russel J. Reiter; Juan C. Mayo; Dun Xian Tan; Rosa M. Sainz; Moisés Alejandro Alatorre-Jiménez; Lilian Qin

Melatonin is uncommonly effective in reducing oxidative stress under a remarkably large number of circumstances. It achieves this action via a variety of means: direct detoxification of reactive oxygen and reactive nitrogen species and indirectly by stimulating antioxidant enzymes while suppressing the activity of pro‐oxidant enzymes. In addition to these well‐described actions, melatonin also reportedly chelates transition metals, which are involved in the Fenton/Haber–Weiss reactions; in doing so, melatonin reduces the formation of the devastatingly toxic hydroxyl radical resulting in the reduction of oxidative stress. Melatonins ubiquitous but unequal intracellular distribution, including its high concentrations in mitochondria, likely aid in its capacity to resist oxidative stress and cellular apoptosis. There is credible evidence to suggest that melatonin should be classified as a mitochondria‐targeted antioxidant. Melatonins capacity to prevent oxidative damage and the associated physiological debilitation is well documented in numerous experimental ischemia/reperfusion (hypoxia/reoxygenation) studies especially in the brain (stroke) and in the heart (heart attack). Melatonin, via its antiradical mechanisms, also reduces the toxicity of noxious prescription drugs and of methamphetamine, a drug of abuse. Experimental findings also indicate that melatonin renders treatment‐resistant cancers sensitive to various therapeutic agents and may be useful, due to its multiple antioxidant actions, in especially delaying and perhaps treating a variety of age‐related diseases and dehumanizing conditions. Melatonin has been effectively used to combat oxidative stress, inflammation and cellular apoptosis and to restore tissue function in a number of human trials; its efficacy supports its more extensive use in a wider variety of human studies. The uncommonly high‐safety profile of melatonin also bolsters this conclusion. It is the current feeling of the authors that, in view of the widely diverse beneficial functions that have been reported for melatonin, these may be merely epiphenomena of the more fundamental, yet‐to‐be identified basic action(s) of this ancient molecule.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1999

Identification of highly elevated levels of melatonin in bone marrow: its origin and significance.

Dun Xian Tan; Lucien C. Manchester; Russel J. Reiter; Wen Bo Qi; Ming Zhang; Susan T. Weintraub; Javier Cabrera; Rosa M. Sainz; Juan C. Mayo

Bone marrow is an important tissue in generation of immunocompetent and peripheral blood cells. The progenitors of hematopoietic cells in bone marrow exhibit continuous proliferation and differentiation and they are highly vulnerable to acute or chronic oxidative stress. In this investigation, highly elevated levels of the antioxidant melatonin were identified in rat bone marrow using immunocytochemistry, radioimmunoassay, high performance liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection and mass spectrometry. Night-time melatonin concentrations (expressed as pg melatonin/mg protein) in the bone marrow of rats were roughly two orders of magnitude higher than those in peripheral blood. Measurement of the activities of the two enzymes (N-acetyltransferase (NAT) and hydroxyindole-O-methoxyltransferase (HIOMT)) which synthesize melatonin from serotonin showed that bone marrow cells have measurable NAT activity, but they have very low levels of HIOMT activity (at the one time they were measured). From these studies we could not definitively determine whether melatonin was produced in bone marrow cells or elsewhere. To investigate the potential pineal origin of bone marrow melatonin, long-term (8-month) pinealectomized rats were used to ascertain if the pineal gland is the primary source of this antioxidant. The bone marrow of pinealectomized rats, however, still exhibited high levels of melatonin. These results indicate that a major portion of the bone marrows melatonin is of extrapineal origin. Immunocytochemistry clearly showed a positive melatonin reaction intracellularly in bone marrow cells. A melatonin concentrating mechanism in these cells is suggested by these findings and this may involve a specific melatonin binding protein. Since melatonin is an endogenous free radical scavenger and an immune-enhancing agent, the high levels of melatonin in bone marrow cells may provide on-site protection to reduce oxidative damage to these highly vulnerable hematopoietic cells and may enhance the immune capacity of cells such as lymphocytes.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2003

MELATONIN AND CELL DEATH: DIFFERENTIAL ACTIONS ON APOPTOSIS IN NORMAL AND CANCER CELLS

Rosa M. Sainz; Juan C. Mayo; Carmen Rodríguez; Dun Xian Tan; Silvia Lopez-Burillo; Russel J. Reiter

AbstractMelatonin is a natural compound synthesized by a variety of organs. It has been shown to nfunction as a cell-protective agent. Since 1994, when the first paper was published documenting nthe role of melatonin in apoptosis, the number of reports in this area has increased rapidly. Much nof the research conducted falls into three major categories: first, the role of melatonin in ninhibiting apoptosis in immune cells; second, the role of melatonin in preventing neuronal napoptosis and finally, the role of melatonin in increasing apoptotic cell death in cancerncells. The mechanisms whereby melatonin influences apoptosis have not clarified, although a number nof mechanistic options have been suggested. Apoptotic cell death is a physiological phenomenon nrelated to homeostasis and proper functioning of tissues and organs; however, a failure in the napoptotic program is related to a number of diseases. The participation of melatonin in apoptosis nin numerous cell types and its potential importance in a variety of diseases such as nimmunodeficiency, neurodegeneration and cancer is summarized in this review.


Biological Signals and Receptors | 1999

The Oxidant/Antioxidant network: Role of melatonin

Russel J. Reiter; Dun Xian Tan; Javier Cabrera; D. D'Arpa; Rosa M. Sainz; Juan C. Mayo; S. Ramos

Melatonin is now known to be a multifaceted free radical scavenger and antioxidant. It detoxifies a variety of free radicals and reactive oxygen intermediates including the hydroxyl radical, peroxynitrite anion, singlet oxygen and nitric oxide. Additionally, it reportedly stimulates several antioxidative enzymes including glutathione peroxidase, glutathione reductase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and superoxide dismutase; conversely, it inhibits a prooxidative enzyme, nitric oxide synthase. Melatonin also crosses all morphophysiological barriers, e.g., the blood-brain barrier, placenta, and distributes throughout the cell; these features increase the efficacy of melatonin as an antioxidant. Melatonin has been shown to markedly protect both membrane lipids and nuclear DNA from oxidative damage. In every experimental model in which melatonin has been tested, it has been found to resist macromolecular damage and the associated dysfunction associated with free radicals.


Biology of Reproduction | 2009

Melatonin and Reproduction Revisited

Russel J. Reiter; Dun Xian Tan; Lucien C. Manchester; Sergio D. Paredes; Juan C. Mayo; Rosa M. Sainz

This brief review summarizes new findings related to the reported beneficial effects of melatonin on reproductive physiology beyond its now well-known role in determining the sexual status in both long-day and short-day seasonally breeding mammals. Of particular note are those reproductive processes that have been shown to benefit from the ability of melatonin to function in the reduction of oxidative stress. In the few species that have been tested, brightly colored secondary sexual characteristics that serve as a sexual attractant reportedly are enhanced by melatonin administration. This is of potential importance inasmuch as the brightness of ornamental pigmentation is also associated with animals that are of the highest genetic quality. Free radical damage is commonplace during pregnancy and has negative effects on the mother, placenta, and fetus. Because of its ability to readily pass through the placenta, melatonin easily protects the fetus from oxidative damage, as well as the maternal tissues and placenta. Examples of conditions in which oxidative and nitrosative stress can be extensive during pregnancy include preeclampsia and damage resulting from anoxia or hypoxia that is followed by reflow of oxygenated blood into the tissue. Given the uncommonly low toxicity of melatonin, clinical trials are warranted to document the protection by melatonin against pathophysiological states of the reproductive system in which free radical damage is known to occur. Finally, the beneficial effects of melatonin in improving the outcomes of in vitro fertilization and embryo transfer should be further tested and exploited. The information in this article has applicability to human and veterinary medicine.


The FASEB Journal | 2001

N1-acetyl-N2-formyl-5-methoxykynuramine, a biogenic amine and melatonin metabolite, functions as a potent antioxidant.

Dun Xian Tan; Lucien C. Manchester; Susanne Burkhardt; Rosa M. Sainz; Juan C. Mayo; Ronnie Kohen; Esther Shohami; Yu-Shu Huo; Rüdiger Hardeland; Russel J. Reiter

The biogenic amine N1‐acetyl‐N2‐formyl‐5‐methoxykynuramine (AFMK) was investigated for its potential antioxidative capacity. AFMK is a metabolite generated through either an enzymatic or a chemical reaction pathway from melatonin. The physiological function of AFMK remains unknown. To our knowledge, this report is the first to document the potent antioxidant action of this biogenic amine. Cyclic voltammetry (CV) shows that AFMK donates two electrons at potentials of 456 mV and 668 mV, and therefore it functions as a reductive force. This function contrasts with all other physiological antioxidants that donate a single electron only when they neutralize free radicals. AFMK reduced 8‐hydroxydeoxyguanosine formation induced by the incubation of DNA with oxidants significantly. Lipid peroxidation resulting from free radical damage to rat liver homogenates was also prevented by the addition of AFMK. The inhibitory effects of AFMK on both DNA and lipid damage appear to be dose‐response related. In cell culture, AFMK efficiently reduced hippocampal neuronal death induced by either hydrogen peroxide, glutamate, or amyloid β25–35 peptide. AFMK is a naturally occurring molecule with potent free radical scavenging capacity (donating two electrons/molecule) and thus may be a valuable new antioxidant for preventing and treating free radical‐related disorders.

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Juan C. Mayo

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Russel J. Reiter

University of Health Science

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Dun Xian Tan

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Lucien C. Manchester

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Silvia Lopez-Burillo

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Javier Cabrera

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Josefa León

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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J. García

Spanish National Research Council

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Wenbo Qi

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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