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8.2: Generation of Free Radicals in the Body

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    1886
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    Skills to Develop

    • Describe how free radicals are generated in the body.
    • Explain oxidative stress and what diseases it is associated with.

    In mainstream advertising, you may have heard that antioxidants can extend your life by preventing disease and slowing the aging process. But what are antioxidants? And how do they work in the body? Is there any truth to the marketers’ claims? Are there better sources than supplements for antioxidants? After reading this chapter you will be able to answer these questions, and your new knowledge will assist you in making dietary decisions to optimize your health.

    Keep in mind as you read there is no scientific evidence that antioxidants singularly provide bodily benefits, but there is evidence that certain benefits are achieved by ingesting antioxidants as part of a balanced, healthy, nutrient-rich diet. This is to say antioxidants may go a long way toward preventing damage, but other nutrients are necessary to repair damage and sustain health. No one chemical acts alone!

    The Atom

    Before we can talk about the nutritional value of antioxidants we must review a few chemistry basics, starting with the atom. Cells are the basic building blocks of life, but atoms are the basic building blocks of all matter, living and non-living.

    The structural elements of an atom are protons (positively charged), neutrons (no charge), and electrons (negatively charged). Protons and neutrons are contained in the dense nucleus of the atom; the nucleus thus has a positive charge. Because opposites attract, electrons are attracted to this nucleus and move around it in the electron cloud.

    Electrons contain energy, and this energy is stored within the charge and movement of electrons and the bonds atoms make with one another. However, this energy is not always stable, depending on the number of electrons within an atom.

    Atoms are more stable when their electrons orbit in pairs. An atom with an odd number of electrons must have an unpaired electron. In most cases, these unpaired electrons are used to create chemical bonds. A chemical bond is an attractive force between atoms and contains potential energy. By bonding, electrons find pairs and chemicals become part of a molecule.

    Bond formation and bond breaking are chemical reactions that involve the movement of electrons between atoms. These chemical reactions occur continuously in the body and many of them will be discussed in more detail later.

    Previous, we reviewed how glucose breaks down into water and carbon dioxide as part of cellular respiration. The energy released by breaking those bonds is used to form molecules of adenosine triphosphate (ATP). Recall how during this process electrons are extracted from glucose in a stepwise manner and transferred to other molecules. Occasionally electrons “escape” and, instead of completing the cellular respiration cycle, are transferred to an oxygen molecule. Oxygen (a molecule with two atoms) with one unpaired electron is known as superoxide (Figure 8.1).

    Atoms and molecules such as superoxide that have unpaired electrons are called free radicals; those containing oxygen are more specifically referred to as reactive oxygen species. The unpaired electron in free radicals destabilizes them, making them highly reactive. Other reactive oxygen species include hydrogen peroxide and the hydroxyl radical.

    3fa165d00ff47328133b8fce70716713.jpg

    Figure 8.2.1: Superoxide: A molecule with one unpaired electron, which makes it a free radical. Source: Wikipedia. “Superoxide.” Last modified November 2, 2012. (CC-BY-SA 3.0; DoSiDo).

    The reactivity of free radicals is what poses a threat to macromolecules such as DNA, RNA, proteins, and fatty acids. Free radicals can cause chain reactions that ultimately damage cells. For example, a superoxide molecule may react with a fatty acid and steal one of its electrons. The fatty acid then becomes a free radical that can react with another fatty acid nearby. As this chain reaction continues, the permeability and fluidity of cell membranes changes, proteins in cell membranes experience decreased activity, and receptor proteins undergo changes in structure that either alter or stop their function. If receptor proteins designed to react to insulin levels undergo a structural change it can negatively affect glucose uptake.

    Our bodies required oxygen to survive and oxidation is the process by which oxygen takes electrons from a material. This process can be beneficial, such as in making energy, or harmful, for example, free radicals that change the structure of a molecule. Free radicals are highly reactive molecules that can react with other molecules and cause damage; rusting is an example.

    Free radicals occur naturally in our body (endogenous) during many different metabolic processes. Here are several examples. Aerobic metabolism, discussed in the chapter on energy metabolism, uses oxygen to burn substrate (glucose, fatty acids, and amino acids). The process of detoxifying drugs can generate free radicals. Finally, one way our immune system fights invaders is to produce free radicals.

    Our environment also exposes us to free radicals. Examples of exogenous sources are cigarette smoke, air pollution, alcohol and polyunsaturated fatty acids.

    Free radical reactions can continue unchecked unless stopped by a defense mechanism.

    The Body’s Defense

    Free radical development is unavoidable, but human bodies have adapted by setting up and maintaining defense mechanisms that reduce their impact. The body’s two major defense systems are free radical detoxifying enzymes and antioxidant chemicals. Free radical detoxifying enzyme systems are responsible for protecting the insides of cells from free radical damage. An antioxidant is any molecule that can block free radicals from stealing electrons; antioxidants act both inside and outside of cells.

    Antioxidants sequester free radicals to make them less damaging and fruits, vegetables, herbs, and spices are high in antioxidants and thus help prevent cell damage and promote health. Vitamin C, vitamin E, and carotenoids are natural antioxidants present in fruits and vegetables. Also, there are several enzymes involved in detoxifying that require the essential minerals selenium, copper, and zinc.

    Free Radical Detoxifying Enzymes

    The three major enzyme systems and the chemical reactions they catalyze are:

    1. Superoxide Dismutases (SOD). These enzymes have either a manganese, copper, or zinc cofactor, which is essential for their free radical detoxifying activity. During SOD-mediated enzymatic catalysis, two superoxides are converted into hydrogen peroxide and oxygen. Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) is still considered a reactive oxygen species, but it is markedly less reactive than a superoxide. SOD enzymes are one of the fastest enzymes known, and they are also inducible, meaning that the higher their exposure to superoxides the greater their number and detoxifying activity.
    2. Catalase. This enzyme contains iron as a cofactor and converts hydrogen peroxide to water and oxygen, thereby finishing the detoxification reaction started by SOD. In cells, catalase enzymes are found in high numbers and continuously patrol for hydrogen peroxide molecules. Catalase is highly efficient and is capable of destroying millions of hydrogen peroxide molecules per second.
    3. Glutathione Peroxidases. The majority of enzymes within this family are dependent on the micronutrient selenium. Similar to catalase, these enzymes convert hydrogen peroxide to water and oxygen.

    Antioxidant Chemicals

    Antioxidants are broadly classified as either hydrophilic (water soluble) or hydrophobic (lipid soluble) chemicals, and this classification determines where they act in the body. Hydrophilic antioxidants act in the cytosol of cells or in extracellular fluids such as blood; hydrophobic antioxidants are largely responsible for protecting cell membranes from free radical damage.

    The body can synthesize some antioxidants, but others must be obtained from the diet.

    Antioxidant Chemicals the Body Synthesizes

    There are two antioxidant chemicals that the body synthesizes. They are:

    1. Glutathione. This molecule is composed of three amino acids and is found in high concentrations in cells. The cysteine amino acid of glutathione contains a sulfur group that can donate an electron to a free radical, thereby stabilizing it. After glutathione has lost its electron, it is regenerated enzymatically so that it can perform its antioxidant function once again.
    2. Uric Acid. This molecule is a metabolic intermediate in the breakdown of nucleotides such as adenine, which is found in DNA and RNA, among other macromolecules. It circulates at high concentrations in the blood and disables circulating free radicals. However, uric acid is a good example of the adage “it’s the dose that makes the poison” because high concentrations in the blood can cause gout, a painful joint disorder.

    Antioxidant Chemicals Obtained from the Diet

    There are many different antioxidants in food, including selenium, which is one of the major antioxidants. However, the antioxidants you may be the most familiar with are vitamins. The “big three” vitamin antioxidants are vitamins E, A, and C, although it may be that they are called the “big three” only because they are the most studied.

    Table 8.2.1: Some Antioxidants Obtained from Diet and Their Related Functions
    Antioxidant Functions Attributed to Antioxidant Capacity
    Vitamin A Protects cellular membranes, prevents glutathione depletion, maintains free radical detoxifying enzyme systems, reduces inflammation
    Vitamin E Protects cellular membranes, prevents glutathione depletion
    Vitamin C Protects DNA, RNA, proteins, and lipids, aids in regenerating vitamin E
    Carotenoids Free radical scavengers
    Lipoic acid Free radical scavenger, aids in regeneration of vitamins C and E
    Phenolic acids Free radical scavengers, protect cellular membranes
    Selenium Cofactor of free radical detoxifying enzymes, maintains glutathione levels, aids in regeneration of vitamins C and E

    The Body’s Offense

    While our bodies have acquired multiple defenses against free radicals, we also use free radicals to support its functions. For example, the immune system uses the cell-damaging properties of free radicals to kill pathogens. First, immune cells engulf an invader (such as a bacterium), then they expose it to free radicals such as hydrogen peroxide, which destroys its membrane. The invader is thus neutralized.

    Scientific studies also suggest hydrogen peroxide acts as a signaling molecule that calls immune cells to injury sites, meaning free radicals may aid with tissue repair when you get cut.

    Free radicals are necessary for many other bodily functions as well. The thyroid gland synthesizes its own hydrogen peroxide, which is required for the production of thyroid hormone. Reactive oxygen species and reactive nitrogen species, which are free radicals containing nitrogen, have been found to interact with proteins in cells to produce signaling molecules. The free radical nitric oxide has been found to help dilate blood vessels and act as a chemical messenger in the brain.

    By acting as signaling molecules, free radicals are involved in the control of their own synthesis, stress responses, regulation of cell growth and death, and metabolism.

    Sources of Free Radicals in the Environment

    The body creates free radicals through the normal processes of metabolism. When the amount of free radicals exceeds the body’s ability to eliminate or neutralize them, an oxidative imbalance occurs.

    Substances and energy sources from the environment can add to or accelerate the production of free radicals within the body. Exposure to excessive sunlight, ozone, smoke, heavy metals, ionizing radiation, asbestos, and other toxic chemicals increase the number of free radicals in the body. They do so by being free radicals themselves or by adding energy that provokes electrons to move between atoms. Excessive exposure to environmental sources of free radicals can contribute to disease by overwhelming the free radical detoxifying systems and those processes involved in repairing oxidative damage.

    Video 8.2.1

    Free Radical Formation (click to see video)

    Oxidative Stress

    Oxidative stress refers to an imbalance in any cell, tissue, or organ between a number of free radicals and the capabilities of the detoxifying and repair systems. Sustained oxidative damage results only under conditions of oxidative stress—when the detoxifying and repair systems are insufficient. Free radical-induced damage, when left unrepaired, destroys lipids, proteins, RNA, and DNA, and can contribute to disease. Oxidative stress has been implicated as a contributing factor to cancer, atherosclerosis (hardening of arteries), arthritis, diabetes, kidney disease, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, emphysema, and cataracts.

    Aging is a process that is genetically determined but modulated by factors in the environment. In the process of aging, tissue function declines. The idea that oxidative stress is the primary contributor to age-related tissue decline has been around for decades, and it is true that tissues accumulate free radical-induced damage as we age. Recent scientific evidence slightly modifies this theory by suggesting oxidative stress is not the initial trigger for the age-related decline of tissues; it is suggested that the true culprit is progressive dysfunction of metabolic processes, which leads to increases in free radical production, thus influencing the stress response of tissues as they age.

    Video 8.2.2

    Free Radicals or Oxidative Stress Will Age Our Bodies' Cells (click to see video)

    Oxidative stress occurs when there is an imbalance between free radical production and their detoxification. Sustained oxidative tissue damage that can contribute to disease occurs only when free radical detoxification systems and repair systems are overwhelmed.

    Key Takeaways

    • Free radicals, unstable molecules with unpaired electrons, are an unavoidable byproduct of cellular metabolism.
    • Free radicals can steal electrons from lipids, proteins, RNA, and DNA, causing them damage.
    • The body has defenses against free radicals—free radical detoxifying enzymes and antioxidant chemicals.
    • The body can synthesize some antioxidant molecules, but many are obtained from the diet.
    • The body sometimes uses free radicals for beneficial functions such as killing pathogens and regulating cell growth and death.
    • Oxidative stress is an imbalance between free radical production and detoxification and repair systems. It also plays an integral role in the development of many chronic diseases and in age-related decline of tissues.
    • Excessive sunlight, ozone, smoke, heavy metals, radiation, asbestos, and other toxic chemicals increase the amount of free radicals in the body and can accelerate the progression of diseases in which oxidative stress is a contributing cause.

    Discussion Starter

    1. What are some ways you can prevent exposure to environmental factors that increase free radical production in your body?

    8.2: Generation of Free Radicals in the Body is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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