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Relationship: 992
Title
Peptide Oxidation leads to Decrease, AKT/eNOS activity
Upstream event
Downstream event
AOPs Referencing Relationship
| AOP Name | Adjacency | Weight of Evidence | Quantitative Understanding | Point of Contact | Author Status | OECD Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peptide Oxidation Leading to Hypertension | adjacent | High | Moderate | Brendan Ferreri-Hanberry (send email) | Not under active development | Under Development |
Taxonomic Applicability
Sex Applicability
| Sex | Evidence |
|---|---|
| Unspecific | High |
Life Stage Applicability
| Term | Evidence |
|---|---|
| All life stages | High |
Exposure to known inducers of oxidative stress causes the phosphorylation of AKT and eNOS, leading to a decrease in their activities.
| ID | Experimental Design | Species | Upstream Observation | Downstream Observation | Citation (first author, year) | Notes |
|---|
| Title | First Author | Biological Plausibility |
Dose Concordance |
Temporal Concordance |
Incidence Concordance |
|---|
Biological Plausibility
Dose Concordance Evidence
Temporal Concordance Evidence
Incidence Concordance Evidence
Uncertainties and Inconsistencies
There are many studies examining the effect of H2O2 on AKT/eNOS phosphorylation, but there are conflicting results. Exposure to H2O2 for 30 minutes resulted in an increase in AKT/eNOS phosphorylation, but its concentration was much higher at 200 μM (Barbosa et al., 2013) compared to 5 μM in Hu et al. (2008). Another study found that treatment with 50 μM H2O2 increased eNOS phosphorylation at Ser1177 (Kumar et al., 2010). Results from studies with H2O2 as a source of ROS may not be universally applicable to this key event relationship.
Is it known how much change in the first event is needed to impact the second? Are there known modulators of the response-response relationships? Are there models or extrapolation approaches that help describe those relationships?
Dhar et al. (2010) showed that an increase in ROS of >30% due to high glucose and methylglyoxal treatment was able to decrease eNOS activity, while Das et al. (2014) showed a three-fold increase in ROS led to a 30% reduction in eNOS activity. SIN-1, high glucose, methylglyoxal and H2O2 were demonstrated to modulate both key events at the same time.
Response-response Relationship
Time-scale
Known Feedforward/Feedback loops influencing this KER
The relationship between oxidative stress and decreased AKT/eNOS activity is supported by studies performed in humans, cows, mice and rats.