Activation of Respiratory Chain Complex II as a Hypoxia Tolerance Indicator during Acute Hypoxia
- Autores: Vasin M.V.1, Ushakov I.B.1,2
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Afiliações:
- Burnazian Federal Center of Medical Biophysics
- Nikiforov All-Russian Center of Emergency and Radiation Medicine
- Edição: Volume 63, Nº 2 (2018)
- Páginas: 237-240
- Seção: Complex Systems Biophysics
- URL: https://ogarev-online.ru/0006-3509/article/view/152569
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1134/S0006350918020252
- ID: 152569
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Resumo
Activation of respiratory chain complex II during acute hypoxia is an adaptive response that facilitates electron transfer in the respiratory chain when complex I is blocked. Stress induced by acute oxygen deficiency in the body stimulates epinephrine and norepinephrine release into the bloodstream. As a result, compensatory metabolic flows and succinate dehydrogenase and succinate oxidation are activated in the cell. Succinate dehydrogenase activation associated with acute hypoxia exhibits characteristic fluctuations; moreover, stronger stimulation results in oscillations with a shorter period and a higher amplitude. These fluctuations are a consequence of the reciprocal relationship between the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems. In subjects who developed adaptation to hypoxia following repeated sessions of breathing a hypoxic gas mixture, no activation of the succinate–ubiquinone-reductase shunt under hypoxic load was observed. The blood lymphocyte reaction can serve as an indicator of tolerance to acute hypoxia.
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Sobre autores
M. Vasin
Burnazian Federal Center of Medical Biophysics
Autor responsável pela correspondência
Email: mikhail-v-vasin@yandex.ru
Rússia, Moscow, 123182
I. Ushakov
Burnazian Federal Center of Medical Biophysics; Nikiforov All-Russian Center of Emergency and Radiation Medicine
Email: mikhail-v-vasin@yandex.ru
Rússia, Moscow, 123182; St. Petersburg, 194044
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