reviewCurrent Medicinal ChemistryApr 29, 2005Closed access

Metals, Toxicity and Oxidative Stress

Slovak University of Technology in Bratislava

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Metal-induced toxicity and carcinogenicity, with an emphasis on the generation and role of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, is reviewed. Metal-mediated formation of free radicals causes various modifications to DNA bases, enhanced lipid peroxidation, and altered calcium and sulfhydryl homeostasis. Lipid peroxides, formed by the attack of radicals on polyunsaturated fatty acid residues of phospholipids, can further react with redox metals finally producing mutagenic and carcinogenic malondialdehyde, 4-hydroxynonenal and other exocyclic DNA adducts (etheno and/or propano adducts). Whilst iron (Fe), copper (Cu), chromium (Cr), vanadium (V) and cobalt (Co) undergo redox-cycling reactions, for a second group…

Citation impact

4,951
total citations
FWCI
80.51
Percentile
100%
References
2
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Chemistry
  • Radical
  • Reactive oxygen species
  • Lipid peroxidation
  • Superoxide dismutase
  • Copper toxicity
  • Hydroxyl radical
  • Oxidative stress
No related works found for this paper.