mitoquinone has been researched along with Metabolic-Syndrome* in 8 studies
2 review(s) available for mitoquinone and Metabolic-Syndrome
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Protective role of mitoquinone against impaired mitochondrial homeostasis in metabolic syndrome.
Mitochondria control various processes in cellular metabolic homeostasis, such as adenosine triphosphate production, generation and clearance of reactive oxygen species, control of intracellular Ca Topics: Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2; Homeostasis; Humans; Metabolic Syndrome; Mitochondria; Organophosphorus Compounds; Ubiquinone | 2021 |
Obesity, metabolic syndrome, and airway disease: a bioenergetic problem?
Multiple studies have determined that obesity increases asthma risk or severity. Metabolic changes of obesity, such as diabetes or insulin resistance, are associated with asthma and poorer lung function. Insulin resistance is also found to increase asthma risk independent of body mass. Conversely, asthma is associated with abnormal glucose and lipid metabolism, insulin resistance, and obesity. Here we review our current understanding of how dietary and lifestyle factors lead to changes in mitochondrial metabolism and cellular bioenergetics, inducing various components of the cardiometabolic syndrome and airway disease. Topics: Asthma; Bronchial Hyperreactivity; Caloric Restriction; Energy Metabolism; Exercise; Humans; Metabolic Syndrome; Mitochondria; Molecular Targeted Therapy; Obesity; Organophosphorus Compounds; Ubiquinone | 2014 |
6 other study(ies) available for mitoquinone and Metabolic-Syndrome
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Increased levels of circulating oxidized mitochondrial DNA contribute to chronic inflammation in metabolic syndrome, and MitoQ-based antioxidant therapy alleviates this DNA-induced inflammation.
Here, the aim was to investigate the role of circulating oxidized mitochondrial DNA (ox-mtDNA) in metabolic syndrome (MetS)-associated chronic inflammation and evaluate the effect of Mito-Quinone (MitoQ)-based antioxidant therapy on inflammation. A total of 112 MetS patients and 111 healthy control individuals (HCs) were recruited. Peripheral blood was collected, and mononuclear cells (PBMCs) were separated. In a preclinical study, MitoQ, a mitochondrial-targeted antioxidant, was administered to Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats fed a high-fat diet (HFD). In vitro, H Topics: Animals; Antioxidants; Cell-Free Nucleic Acids; DNA, Mitochondrial; Hydrogen Peroxide; Inflammation; Metabolic Syndrome; NF-kappa B; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Toll-Like Receptor 9; Ubiquinone | 2023 |
A Mitochondrial Specific Antioxidant Reverses Metabolic Dysfunction and Fatty Liver Induced by Maternal Cigarette Smoke in Mice.
Maternal smoking leads to glucose and lipid metabolic disorders and hepatic damage in the offspring, potentially due to mitochondrial oxidative stress. Mitoquinone mesylate (MitoQ) is a mitochondrial targeted antioxidant with high bioavailability. This study aimed to examine the impact of maternal cigarette smoke exposure (SE) on offspring's metabolic profile and hepatic damage, and whether maternal MitoQ supplementation during gestation can affect these changes. Female Balb/c mice (eight weeks) were either exposed to air or SE for six weeks prior to mating and throughout gestation and lactation. A subset of the SE dams were supplied with MitoQ in the drinking water (500 µmol/L) during gestation and lactation. Intraperitoneal glucose tolerance test was performed in the male offspring at 12 weeks and the livers and plasma were collected at 13 weeks. Maternal SE induced glucose intolerance, hepatic steatosis, mitochondrial oxidative stress and related damage in the adult offspring. Maternal MitoQ supplementation reduced hepatic mitochondrial oxidative stress and improved markers of mitophagy and mitochondrial biogenesis. This may restore hepatic mitochondrial health and was associated with an amelioration of glucose intolerance, hepatic steatosis and pathological changes induced by maternal SE. MitoQ supplementation may potentially prevent metabolic dysfunction and hepatic pathology induced by intrauterine SE. Topics: Animals; Antioxidants; Fatty Liver; Female; Lactation; Lipidomics; Male; Maternal Exposure; Metabolic Syndrome; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Mitochondria, Liver; Organophosphorus Compounds; Oxidative Stress; Pregnancy; Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects; Tobacco Smoke Pollution; Ubiquinone | 2019 |
The mitochondrial-targeted antioxidant MitoQ ameliorates metabolic syndrome features in obesogenic diet-fed rats better than Apocynin or Allopurinol.
The prevalence of metabolic syndrome (MetS) components including obesity, dyslipidemia, insulin resistance (IR), and hepatic steatosis is rapidly increasing in wealthy societies. It is accepted that inflammation/oxidative stress are involved in the initiation/evolution of the MetS features. The present work was designed to evaluate the effects of three major cellular ROS production systems on obesity, glucose tolerance, and hepatic steatosis development and on oxidative stress onset. To do so, 40 young male Sprague-Dawley rats were divided into 5 groups: 1-control group, 2-high fat (HF) group (60% energy from fat), 3-HF+ MitoQ (mitochondrial ROS scavenger), 4-HF+ Apocynin (NADPH oxidase inhibitor), 5-HF+ Allopurinol (xanthine oxidase inhibitor). After 8 weeks of these treatments, surrogate MetS, mitochondrial function, and oxidative stress markers were measured in blood and liver. As expected, rats that were fed the HF diet exhibited increased body weight, glucose intolerance, overt hepatic steatosis, and increased hepatic oxidative stress. The impacts of the studied ROS inhibitors on these aspects of the MetS were markedly different. MitoQ showed the most clinically relevant effects, attenuating body weight gain and glucose intolerance provoked by the HF diet. Both Apocynin and Allopurinol showed limited effects suggesting secondary roles of xanthine oxidase (XO) or NADPH oxidase-dependent ROS production in the onset of oxidative stress-dependent obesity, glucose intolerance, and hepatic steatosis process. Thus, MitoQ revealed the central role of mitochondrial oxidative stress in the development of MetS and suggested that mitochondria-targeted antioxidants may be worth considering as potentially helpful therapies for MetS features. Topics: Acetophenones; Allopurinol; Animals; Antioxidants; Blotting, Western; Diet, High-Fat; Disease Models, Animal; Male; Metabolic Syndrome; Mitochondria; Obesity; Organophosphorus Compounds; Oxidative Stress; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction; Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction; Ubiquinone | 2014 |
Resolution of mitochondrial oxidative stress rescues coronary collateral growth in Zucker obese fatty rats.
We have previously found abrogated ischemia-induced coronary collateral growth in Zucker obese fatty (ZOF) rats compared with Zucker lean (ZLN) rats. Because ZOF rats have structural abnormalities in their mitochondria suggesting dysfunction and also show increased production of O(2), we hypothesized that mitochondrial dysfunction caused by oxidative stress impairs coronary collateral growth in ZOF.. Increased levels of reactive oxygen species were observed in aortic endothelium and smooth muscle cells in ZOF rats compared with ZLN rats. Reactive oxygen species levels were decreased by the mitochondria-targeted antioxidants MitoQuinone (MQ) and MitoTempol (MT) as assessed by MitoSox Red and dihydroethidine staining. Lipid peroxides (a marker of oxidized lipids) were increased in ZOF by ≈47% compared with ZLN rats. The elevation in oxidative stress was accompanied by increased antioxidant enzymes, except glutathione peroxidase-1, and by increased uncoupling protein-2 in ZOF versus ZLN rats. In addition, elevated respiration rates were also observed in the obese compared with lean rats. Administration of MQ significantly normalized the metabolic profiles and reduced lipid peroxides in ZOF rats to the same level observed in lean rats. The protective effect of MQ also suppressed the induction of uncoupling protein-2 in the obese rats. Resolution of mitochondrial oxidative stress by MQ or MT restored coronary collateral growth to the same magnitude observed in ZLN rats in response to repetitive ischemia.. We conclude that mitochondrial oxidative stress and dysfunction play a key role in disrupting coronary collateral growth in obesity and the metabolic syndrome, and elimination of the mitochondrial oxidative stress with MQ or MT rescues collateral growth. Topics: Animals; Antioxidants; Collateral Circulation; Coronary Vessels; Disease Models, Animal; Lipid Peroxidation; Lipid Peroxides; Male; Metabolic Syndrome; Mitochondria, Heart; Mitochondrial Proteins; Obesity; Organophosphorus Compounds; Oxidative Stress; Piperidines; Rats; Rats, Zucker; Reactive Oxygen Species; Ubiquinone | 2012 |
The mitochondria-targeted antioxidant MitoQ decreases features of the metabolic syndrome in ATM+/-/ApoE-/- mice.
A number of recent studies suggest that mitochondrial oxidative damage may be associated with atherosclerosis and the metabolic syndrome. However, much of the evidence linking mitochondrial oxidative damage and excess reactive oxygen species (ROS) with these pathologies is circumstantial. Consequently the importance of mitochondrial ROS in the etiology of these disorders is unclear. Furthermore, the potential of decreasing mitochondrial ROS as a therapy for these indications is not known. We assessed the impact of decreasing mitochondrial oxidative damage and ROS with the mitochondria-targeted antioxidant MitoQ in models of atherosclerosis and the metabolic syndrome (fat-fed ApoE(-/-) mice and ATM(+/-)/ApoE(-/-) mice, which are also haploinsufficient for the protein kinase, ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM). MitoQ administered orally for 14weeks prevented the increased adiposity, hypercholesterolemia, and hypertriglyceridemia associated with the metabolic syndrome. MitoQ also corrected hyperglycemia and hepatic steatosis, induced changes in multiple metabolically relevant lipid species, and decreased DNA oxidative damage (8-oxo-G) in multiple organs. Although MitoQ did not affect overall atherosclerotic plaque area in fat-fed ATM(+/+)/ApoE(-/-) and ATM(+/-)/ApoE(-/-) mice, MitoQ reduced the macrophage content and cell proliferation within plaques and 8-oxo-G. MitoQ also significantly reduced mtDNA oxidative damage in the liver. Our data suggest that MitoQ inhibits the development of multiple features of the metabolic syndrome in these mice by affecting redox signaling pathways that depend on mitochondrial ROS such as hydrogen peroxide. These findings strengthen the growing view that elevated mitochondrial ROS contributes to the etiology of the metabolic syndrome and suggest a potential therapeutic role for mitochondria-targeted antioxidants. Topics: Adiposity; Animals; Antioxidants; Apolipoproteins E; Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated Proteins; Atherosclerosis; Blood Glucose; Cell Cycle Proteins; Cells, Cultured; Diet, High-Fat; DNA-Binding Proteins; Energy Metabolism; Female; Lipid Metabolism; Lipids; Liver; Male; Metabolic Syndrome; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Knockout; Mitochondria; Organ Size; Organophosphorus Compounds; Oxidative Stress; Oxygen Consumption; Plaque, Atherosclerotic; Protein Carbonylation; Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases; Reactive Oxygen Species; Tumor Suppressor Proteins; Ubiquinone | 2012 |
Metabolic syndrome and mitochondrial dysfunction: insights from preclinical studies with a mitochondrially targeted antioxidant.
Topics: Animals; Antioxidants; Apolipoproteins E; Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated Proteins; Atherosclerosis; Cell Cycle Proteins; DNA-Binding Proteins; Female; Male; Metabolic Syndrome; Mitochondria; Organophosphorus Compounds; Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases; Tumor Suppressor Proteins; Ubiquinone | 2012 |