articleJournal of Physics D Applied PhysicsJun 13, 2012Closed access

The emerging role of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species in redox biology and some implications for plasma applications to medicine and biology

University of California, Berkeley

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Abstract

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) and the closely related reactive nitrogen species (RNS) are often generated in applications of atmospheric pressure plasmas intended for biomedical purposes. These species are also central players in what is sometimes referred to as 'redox' or oxidation–reduction biology. Oxidation–reduction biochemistry is fundamental to all of aerobic biology. ROS and RNS are perhaps best known as disease-associated agents, implicated in diabetes, cancer, heart and lung disease, autoimmune disease and a host of other maladies including ageing and various infectious diseases. These species are also known to play active roles in the immune systems of both animals and plants and are key signalling…

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Authors

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Reactive oxygen species
  • Plasma medicine
  • Biology
  • Reactive nitrogen species
  • Redox
  • Plasma
  • Cell biology
  • Chemistry
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