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Oxidative Stress in Diseases is Studied
U.S. scientists
have found a way to measure oxidative stress in the development of diseases
by studying it at the sub-cellular level.
Currently, information
about oxidative stress response comes primarily from studies using reactive
oxygen species with ill-defined locations within the cell, Boston College
researchers said. That, they said, means existing models don't account
for possible differences between stresses originating within particular
regions of the cell.
But through
the use of novel synthetic intracellular targeting molecules that contain
oxygen species-generating compounds that cause oxidative stress, the researchers
have targeted specific locations within the cell -- notably the nucleus
and mitochondrion -- and observed how those molecules interact with nucleic
acids.
That process,
they said, will make it easier to determine what parts of a cell are most
likely to combat the effects of oxidative stress and which are weaker,
the researchers said.
Such knowledge,
they said, might lead to the development of toxic agents that could be
used, for example, to attack cancer at the sub-cellular level.
The research
appears in the journal Chemistry & Biology.
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2007 by United Press International.
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