Reactive oxygen species (ROS), oxygen radicals and antioxidants: Where are we now, where is the field going and where should we go? — Barry Halliwell (2022) | RDL Network
The field of oxygen free radicals, antioxidants and reactive oxygen species (ROS) has exploded in the past few decades, and BBRC has published several seminal papers. ROS can cause oxidative damage, but also play fundamental roles in living organisms, in such processes as signal transduction and defence against pathogens. ROS underpin every aspect of human biology. Indeed, an endless stream of published papers refers to the biological roles of “ROS”. Sadly, much of this work is mechanistically meaningless. To make progress, the detailed molecular mechanisms of action of ROS must be elucidated and appropriate methodology must be used to measure them and the oxidative damage that they can cause, as emphasized in a recent review by Murphy et al. Attention must also switch from clinical studies involving administration of high-dose supplements of vitamins E, C and β-carotene for the treatment or prevention of human disease into other promising diet-derived cytoprotective agents. One of them may be ergothioneine.
Michael P. Murphy, Arne Holmgren, Nils‐Göran Larsson, Barry Halliwell, Christopher J Chang, Balaraman Kalyanaraman, Sue Goo Rhee, Paul J. Thornalley, Linda Partridge, David Gems, Thomas Nyström, Vsevolod V. Belousov, Paul T. Schumacker, Christine C. Winterbourn
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