Submitted:
19 May 2025
Posted:
20 May 2025
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Abstract
Keywords:
Introduction
The Double-Edged Sword of ROS
Maintaining Redox Balance: Production vs. Defence
From Eustress to Distress: Crossing the Redox Signalling Threshold
Mitochondrial and Lysosomal Contributions to Oxidative Distress
Cellular Sources of Reactive Oxygen Species
NADPH Oxidases (NOX Enzymes)
Mitochondrial Electron Transport Chain
Lysosomes: Indirect Contributors to ROS Generation
Amplifying the Damage: ROS-Induced ROS Production (RIRP)
Ionic Messengers in RIRP: The Roles of Ca²⁺ and Zn²⁺
The TRPM2 Channel: A Key Ca²⁺ Conduit in Oxidative Stress
Zinc Dyshomeostasis and Mitochondrial ROS
Integrating the Pieces: Towards a Unified Mechanism
A Unified Vicious Cycle: Inter-Organelle Crosstalk Drives Pathological ROS Amplification
Initiating the Cycle: Synergistic Activation of TRPM2 and NOX2 at the Plasma Membrane
Calcium Overload Targets Lysosomes
From Damaged Lysosomes to Mitochondria: The Journey of Zinc
Zinc Disrupts Mitochondrial Function and Bolsters ROS Production
Closing the Loop: Mitochondrial ROS Stimulates ADPR Production to Perpetuate the Cycle
The Impact of Activating the Signalling Cycle
Evidence Supporting the Unified Mechanism Across Disease Models
| Specific Disease | TRPM2 Involvement | NOX2 Involvement | Zn2+ Involvement | Mitochondrial ROS Involvement | PARP Involvement | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Alzheimer's Disease (AD) |
TRPM2 inhibition (2-APB or ACA): ↓Aβ42-induced neuronal death in mouse hippocampus [142]. TRPM2 KO: ↓Aβ-induced neurotoxicity ↓Ca²⁺ influx ↓ TNF-α release [142]. TRPM2 KO (APP/PS1 mice): Improved spatial memory, ↓Microglial activation in hippocampus [143]. |
NOX2-KO in mice: improved spatial memory [144]. Postmortem analyses: ↑NOX2 activity and expression in frontal and temporal cortices in patients with mild cognitive impairment [145]. |
Clioquinol (Zinc chelators): Potential in reducing plaque load in AD models [146]. ZnT3-deficient mice: ↓ Aβ oligomer accumulation [146]. |
Scavenging mito-ROS with mitochondria targeted ROS scavengers in 3xTg-AD mice: ↓ OS ↓ Aβ oligomer accumulation ↓Cell death ↓Cognitive impairment [147]. |
PARP inhibition (pharmacological and genetic): ↓neuronal loss through parthanatos, neuroinflammation, cognitive impairment [141]. |
Significant evidence from individual studies for all listed players, but needs to be integrated into a single model system |
| Parkinson's Disease (PD) | TRPM2 inhibition (2-APB, PJ34) and knockdown in cellular model: ↓MPP⁺- induced mtROS production and cell death [76] [148]. Post-mortem brains of PD patients: ↑TRPM2 protein levels in SNpc [148]. |
NOX2 inhibition (pharmacological) in cellular model: ↓MPP⁺-induced Ca²⁺ rise ↓mtROS production ↓Cell death [76]. NOX2 inhibition (apocynin) in paraquat and 6-OHDA administered mice: ↓Cognitive deficits ↓Oxidative stress ↓Neuroinflammation [149] [150]. NOX2 KO in 6-OHDA administered mice: ↓Dopaminergic neuron loss [150]. Post-mortem brains of PD patients: ↑gp91phox expression in midbrain [151]. |
Chelation of intracellular Zn²⁺ (TPEN): ↓ROS levels ↓ MPP⁺-induced cytotoxicity [76]. Post-mortem brains of PD patients: ↑Zn2+ levels observed in SNpc [152]. Genetic mutations in PARK9: ↑Mitochondrial Zn2+ in dopaminergic neurons ↑Mitochondrial damage [51,124]. |
Scavenging mito-ROS with mitochondria targeted ROS scavengers: ↓MPP⁺-induced cell death [76]. MitoQ in preclinical models: Neuroprotective [153]. |
PARP-1 chemical inhibition or gene deletion: ↓α-synuclein-induced toxicity and neuronal death Post-mortem PD patient brains and CSF: ↑PAR levels [154]. |
Significant evidence from individual studies for all listed players, but need in vivo evidence |
| Cardiac ischemia | TRPM2 KO mice or inhibition (chemical) subjected to IR injury: ↓Infarct size ↓Inflammation ↑Cardiac outcome [155]. |
NOX2 KO mice subjected to IR injury: ↑ROS ↓Infarct size [156]. |
Zn2+ chelation (TPEN): ↓Infarct area in rat hearts during I/R injury [157]. |
Scavenging mito-ROS with MitoQ in rats subjected to IR injury: ↓Heart dysfunction ↓Mitochondrial damage ↓Cell death [158]. |
PARP1 inhibition (chemical) in mice subjected to IR injury: ↓Infarct size ↓Inflammation ↑Cardiac function [159]. |
Significant evidence from individual studies for all listed players, but needs to be integrated into a single model system |
| Stroke/Cerebral Ischemia | TRPM2 KO or inhibition (chemical) in male mice subjected to IR injury: ↓Neuronal cell death ↓Infarct size ↓Memory loss [160,161]. |
NOX2 KO mice subjected to IR injury: Delay infarct progression, but no protect from brain injury [162]. |
Zn2+ chelation (TPEN): Protects mice from ischaemic brain damage [106]. |
Mitochondrial ROS in IR injury mouse model: ↑ Mitochondrial ROS in hippocampus in mice. MitoQ: ↓Hippocampal damage [163]. |
PARP1 gene inactivation: Protection against ischemic insults [164]. |
Significant evidence from individual studies for all listed players, but needs to be integrated into a single model system |
| Various Cancers | TRPM2 Inhibition (chemical/genetic- SiRNA/KO): Breast cancer cells ↓ Proliferation ↑ DNA damage [165]. Neuroblastoma cells ↓ Viability ↑ ROS ↑DNA damage (sensitised to doxorubicin) [166]. Leukaemia ↓ Proliferation ↑ Chemo sensitivity [167]. Ovarian Cancer ↓ Cell viability ↓Proliferation ↑ Apoptosis [168]. PC3 and HeLa cells ↓Cell migration [103]. |
NOX2 inhibition: Leukaemia cells ↑ Cell death [169]. NOX2-KO and inhibition in mice: ↓ Lung metastases [170]. |
Zn2+ depletion: Breast cancer cells ZIP10 KO or zinc depletion: ↓Cell migration [171]. PC3 and HeLa Zn2+ chelation (TPEN): ↓Cell migration [103]. |
Scavenging mito-ROS in mice: Mice lung carcinoma cells ↓ Metastasis [172]. Mouse melanoma cells ↓ Cell growth ↓ viability ↑ Apoptosis [173]. |
↑ PARP1 expression in breast, ovarian, and lung cancers. [131]. PARP1 inhibition: Cervical cancer cell lines: ↓ Proliferation ↑ Cell death ↓ Metastasis [174]. Liver cancer cells: ↓ Proliferation ↓Cell migration [175]. PARP inhibition (PJ34) ↓Cell migration [103]. |
There is significant evidence for all listed players in cancer, but integrating studies into a generalized model can be challenging. |
|
Atherosclerosis (AS) |
TRPM2 KO in Apoe-/- mice: ↓Progression of AS [176]. TRPM2 KO and KD: ↓Mitochondrial damage in EC [100]. |
NOX2 KO in Apoe/-e mice: ↓Plaque formation due to absence of NOX2 in macrophages and vessel wall cells [177]. |
Zn2+ role in AS unclear, but excess mitochondrial Zn2+ causes its fragmentation in EC [100]. |
NOX2 KO in Apoe/-e mice: ↓Superoxide levels. MitoQ treatment: ↓Plaques [178]. |
PARP1 inhibition or KO Apoe/-e mice: ↓Plaque formation ↓Progression of atherosclerosis [179]. |
Significant evidence from individual studies for all listed players, but needs to be integrated into a single model system |
| Type 2 Diabetes | TRPM2 KO: ↑Insulin Sensitivity ↑Resistance to Diet-Induced Obesity ↑Glucose Metabolism ↓Obesity-Mediated Inflammation [129]. Pancreatic β-cells (FFA treated): ↑NOX-dependent ROS ↑ Mitochondrial damage ↑Cell death [101]. |
NOX2 KO: ↑Insulin Sensitivity ↑Resistance to Diet-Induced Obesity [180]. Pancreatic β-cells/islets exposed to FFA: ↑Insulin secretion ↓ROS [101]. |
Zn2+ chelation (TPEN): ↓FFA -induced β-cell death [101]. Overexpression of hZnT8: ↑Pancreatic Zn2+ ↓insulin and glucose tolerance [181]. |
Excess nutrition: ↑mtROS production ↑Insulin resistance ↑β-cell dysfunction [182]. |
PARP-1 KO: ↓β-cell dysfunction, ↓Insulin resistance, ↓ Vascular damage [183]. Pancreatic β-cells: ↓Death by PARP-1 inhibitor (PJ34) [101]. |
Significant evidence from individual studies for all listed players, but needs to be integrated into a single model system |
| Type 1 diabetes | TRPM2 KO in mice (STZ model): ↓ β-cell death ↓Hyperglycaemia [184]. |
NOX2 KO: ↓Glucose-induced Superoxide in islets ↑Glucose-induced insulin secretion ↓β-cell apoptosis [185]. |
Zn2+ chelation in STZ mouse model: ↓ β-cell death ↓Hyperglycaemia [184] [186]. |
Mitochondrial ROS: ↑ β-cell damage [20]. |
PARP-1 KO in STZ mouse model: ↓ β-cell death ↓Hyperglycaemia [187]. |
Significant evidence from individual studies for all listed players, but needs to be integrated into a single model system |
Therapeutic Opportunities and Future Directions
Acknowledgements
Author Contributions
Competing Interests
References
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