Scientific Program - Society for Free Radical Research International
Transcription
Scientific Program - Society for Free Radical Research International
Scientific Program (Satellite Symposium) March 23 (Sunday) Underline: Presenting Author Room A Satellite Symposium 1: The 8th Forum of Innovation Center for Medical Redox Navigation, 12:30-16:00 Kyushu University - Biomedical Innovation by “Redox Navigation” Plenary Lecture 12:35-13:25 Chair: Hideo Utsumi, Japan SS1-PL Tocotrienol against stroke Chandan K. Sen Dept. of Surg., Davis Heart and Lung Res. Inst., The Ohio State Univ. Wexner Med. Cent., USA Young Investigation Presentation 13:35-14:35 Chair: Toyoshi Inoguchi, Japan SS1-Y1 Oxidative stress in schizophrenia: Clarifying the underlying mechanisms using ReMI Takahiro A. Kato Dept. of Neuropsychiatry, Grad. Sch. of Med. Sci., Kyushu Univ., Japan SS1-Y2 Development and application of redox molecular imaging Fuminori Hyodo Innovation Cent. for Med. Redox Navigation., Kyushu Univ., Japan SS1-Y3 Technology for imaging redox-related diseases in vivo Kazuhiro Ichikawa Innovation Cent. for Med. Redox Navigation, Kyushu Univ., Japan 22 SFRRI 2014 Room B2 Satellite Symposium Mar. 23 (Sun) Satellite Symposium 2: IRN2014 Kyoto related to Act Kyoto Redox TRX Translational Res Center - Health & Skincare / Medicare / Agingcare - 10:30-16:00 Opening Introductory Remarks Junji Yodoi, Japan SS2-1 Mammalian thioredoxin reductase 1 in cellular signaling pathways Elias S.J. Arnér Div. of Biochem., Dept. of Med. Biochem. and Biophys., Karolinska Inst., Sweden SS2-2 Proinflammatory functions of extracellular Peroxiredoxin 1: A case in ozone induced acute lung inflammation in mice Tetsuro Ishii1, Eiji Warabi1, Toru Yanagawa1, Rie Yanagisawa2 1 Fac. of Med., Univ. of Tsukuba, Japan, 2Cent. for Environ. Health Sci., Natl. Inst. for Environ. Stu., Japan SS2-3 Thioredoxin-1 (Trx-1) - mediated regulation of survival signaling: Intracellular compartmentalization and interactions with Thioredoxin-interacting protein (Txnip) Hugo P. Monteiro1, Fernando T. Ogata1, Roberto J. Arai2, Wagner L. Batista3, Adriano Sartori1, Hiroshi Masutani4, Junji Yodoi4, Arnold Stern5 1 Dept. de Bioquímica, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, S.Paulo, Brazil, 2Inst. do Câncer do Est. de São Paulo, FMUSP, S. Paulo, Brazil, 3Dept. de Ciências Biológicas, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, Diadema, S.Paulo, Brazil, 4Dept. of Biol. Responses, Kyoto Univ., Kyoto, Japan, 5Dept. of Pharmacol., NYU Sch. of Med., NY, USA SS2-4 TBD Chandan K. Sen Dept. of Surg., Davis Heart and Lung Res. Inst., The Ohio State Univ. Wexner Med. Cent., USA Short Talk Arne Holmgren, Sweden Sue-Goo Rhee, Korea Kazuichi Okazaki, Japan Hiroshi Masutani, Japan Junji Yodoi, Japan Tian Haih, Japan Kiichi Hirota, Japan SFRRI 2014 23 Scientific Program (Satellite Symposium) Room C1 Satellite Symposium 3: The 32nd Annual Meeting of Japanese Society for Cytoprotection & Cytobiology 10:25-15:45 Opening Address 10:25-10:30 Chair: Hideyuki Majima, Japan General Session 1 10:30-11:15 SS3-1 0 cells are susceptible to X-irradiation Hiroko P Indo1, Chizuru Tsuruoka2, Shizuko Kakinuma2, Masao Suzuki2, Ken-ichiro Matsumoto2, Ikuo Nakanishi2, Hsiu-Chuan Yen3, Hirofumi Matsui4, Toshihiko Ozawa5, Hideyuki J Majima1,6 1 Dept. Oncol. and Dept. Space Environ. Med., Kagoshima Univ. Grad. Sch. Med. Dent. Sci., Japan, 2Natl. Inst. of Radiolog. Sci., Japan, 3Dept. Med. Biotechnol. Lab. Sci., Chang Gung Univ., Taiwan, 4Div. Gastroent., Grad. Sch. Comprehensive Human Sci., Univ. of Tsukuba, Japan, 5Dept. Health Pharm., Yokohama Coll. Pharm., Japan SS3-2 The deficiency of histidine enhances the delay of wound healing caused by indomethacin through the mitochondrial dysfunction Hiroshi Ichikawa1, Yukiko Minamiyama2, Mayuko Oka2, Tatsunobu Matsui2, Tomohisa Takagi3, Yuji Naito3, Toshikazu Yoshikawa3 1 Grad. Sch. Life and Med. Sci., Doshisha Univ., Japan, 2Food Hygiene and Environ. Health, Div. of Appl. Life Sci., Grad. Sch. Life and Environ. Sci., Kyoto Pref. Univ., Japan, 3Mol. Gastroent. Hepatol., Grad. Sch. Med. Sci., Kyoto Pref. Univ. Med., Japan SS3-3 Redox properties of a water-soluble cyclic selenide and its application as a glutathione peroxidase mimic Michio Iwaoka1, K. Indira Priyadarsini2 1 Dept. Chem., Sch. Sci., Tokai Univ., Japan, 2Rad. Photochem. Div., Bhabha Atomic Res. Cent., India General Session 2 11:15-12:00 SS3-4 Morphological and molecular components of tolerance to complete desiccation in the cells of an anhydrobiotic insect Oleg Gusev1,2,3, Valdimir Evtugyn1, Elena Shagimardanova1, Jun Okada2, Takashi Okuda2, Takahiro Kikawada2 1 Inst. of Fund. Biol. and Med., Kazan Fed. Univ., Russia, 2Natl. Inst. of Agrobiol. Sci., Japan, 3JAXA, ISAS, Japan SS3-5 Gastric cancer chemoprevention by phenethyl isothiocyanate-containing diet in chemically - but not genetically induced gastric cancer in mice Anders Øverby1,2, Chun-Mei Zhao2, Atle Magnar Bones1, Duan Chen2 1 Dept. of Biol., Norwegian Univ. of Sci. and Technol., Norway, 2Dept. of Cancer Res. and Mol. Med., Norwegian Univ. of Sci. and Technol., Norway 24 SFRRI 2014 Luncheon Seminar Satellite Symposium Mar. 23 (Sun) SS3-6 Oligosaccharides from agar ameliorate intestinal inflammation through the induction of heme oxygenase-1 expression in macrophages Yasuki Higashimura1,2, Yuji Naito1, Tomohisa Takagi1, Katsura Mizushima1, Hiromu Ohnogi2,3, Toshikazu Yoshikawa2 1 Mol. Gastroent. and Hepatol., Grad. Sch. Med. Sci., Kyoto Pref. Univ. Med., Japan, 2Dept. Food Factor Sci., Kyoto Pref. Univ. Med., Japan, 3Takara Bio Inc., Japan 12:00-13:00 SS3-L Molecular mechanism in the pathogenesis of the colitis-associated colorectal cancer Kiichiro Tsuchiya1, Mamoru Watanabe2 1 Dept. of Adv. Therap. for Gastrointest. Dis., Grad. Sch. Tokyo Med. and Dent. Univ., Japan, 2Dept. of Gastroent. and Hepatol., Grad. Sch. Tokyo Med. and Dent. Univ., Japan Special Lectures 13:00-14:10 SS3-SL1 Pathomechanisms of Parkinson’s disease: Insights from the monogenic forms of Parkinson’s disease Nobutaka Hattori Dept. of Neurol., Juntendo Univ. Sch. of Med., Japan SS3-SL2 Mitochondria are a novel target for prevention of the side effects of cancer therapy Daret St. Clair Basic Res. Markey Cancer Cent., Univ. of Kentucky, USA Coffee Break 14:10-14:30 General Session 3 14:30-15:30 SS3-7 Carbon monoxide-releasing molecule attenuates intestinal ischemia-reperfusion injury in mice via up-regulation of Nrf2/HO-1 Kazuhiro Katada1, Tomohisa Takagi1, Takaya Iida1, Katsura Mizushima1, Kazuhiro Kamada1, Kazuhiko Uchiyama1, Osamu Handa1, Nobuaki Yagi1, Hiroshi Ichikawa2, Toshikazu Yoshikawa1, Yoshito Itoh1, Yuji Naito1 1 Dept. of Mol. Gastroent. and Hepatol., Grad. Sch. of Med. Sci., Kyoto Pref. Univ. of Med., Japan, 2Dept. of Med. Life Sys., Fac. of Life and Med. Sci., Doshisha Univ. SS3-8 Rosuvastatin prevents liver tumorigenesis in high-fat diet-fed mice Shinya Fukunishi, Keisuke Yokohama, Hideko Ohama, Tetsuya Sujishi, Yusuke Tsuchimoto, Akira Asai, Yasuhiro Tsuda, Kazuhide Higuchi 2nd Dept. of Intern. Med., Osaka Med. Coll., Japan SFRRI 2014 25 Scientific Program (Satellite Symposium) SS3-9 Role of substance P and CGRP in gastric and hepatic MALT lymphoma induced by Helicobacter heilmannii infection Masahiko Nakamura1, Hidenori Matsui2, Tetsufumi Takahashi1, Kanji Tsuchimoto1 1 Sch. of Pharm. Sci., Kitasato Univ., Japan, 2Kitasato Inst. for Life Sci., Kitasato Univ., Japan SS3-10 Reduction of prostaglandin transporter is an independent predictor of poor prognosis in gastric adenocarcinoma associated with tumor angiogenesis Shogo Takeda, Tetsuya Tanigawa, Toshio Watanabe, Hirokazu Yamagami, Masatsugu Shiba, Kenji Watanabe, Kazunari Tominaga, Yasuhiro Fujiwara, Kazuya Muguruma, Kosei Hirakawa, Tetsuo Arakawa Dept. of Gastroent. and Surg. Oncol., Osaka City Univ. Grad. Sch. of Med., Japan Closing Address 26 SFRRI 2014 15:30-15:45 Room C2 Satellite Symposium Mar. 23 (Sun) Satellite Symposium 4: Flavonoids: From Plants to Human Health 13:00-16:05 Chairs: Cesar G. Fraga, Argentina Junji Terao, Japan SS4-1 Plant flavonoid metabolism in humans 13:00-13:25 Alan Crozier1, Gina Borges1, Javier Ottaviani2, Tony Y Momma3, Justin van der Hooft1, Hagen Schroeter2 1 Sch. of Med., Univ. of Glasgow, UK, 2Mars, Inc., McLean, USA, 3Dept. of Nutr., Univ. of California Davis, USA SS4-2 Molecular mechanisms behind flavanol health effects Patricia I Oteiza Dept. of Nutr. and Dept. of Environ. Toxicol., Univ. of California, Davis, USA SS4-3 Flavonoids and vascular function and blood pressure Kevin D. Croft Sch. of Med. and Pharm., Univ. of Western Australia, Australia SS4-4 Flavonoids and neuro-cognitive improvements: The invovlement of the vascular system as a mediator of benefits Jeremy P. E. Spencer Dept. of Food and Nutr. Sci., Univ. of Reading, UK SS4-5 Quercetin and metabolic syndrome Masuko Kobori Natl. Food Res. Inst., Natl. Agric. and Food Res. Org. (NARO), Japan SS4-6 Isoflavones/equol and human health Yoshiko Ishimi Dept. of Food Function and Labeling, Natl. Inst. of Health and Nutr., Japan SS4-7 Flavonoids: How far are we from dietary guidelines and evidence-based applications? Hagen Schroeter Mars Inc., USA Closing Remarks Helmut Sies Heinrich-Heine-Univ. Dusseldolf, Germany 13:25-13:50 13:50-14:15 14:15-14:40 14:40-15:05 15:05-15:30 15:30-15:55 15:55-16:05 SFRRI 2014 27 Scientific Program March 23 (Sunday) Room A Opening Ceremony 16:30-17:00 Chairs of SFRRI2014: Yuji Naito, Japan Shinya Toyokuni, Japan President of SFRRI: Michael Davies, Australia Executive Advisors of SFRRI2014: Etsuo Niki, Japan Toshikazu Yoshikawa, Japan President of SFRR Japan (Host Society): Toshihiko Ozawa, Japan Plenary Lecture 1 17:00-18:00 Chair: Etsuo Niki, Japan Sponsored by SFRBM PL1 Disentangling the effects of tyrosine nitration on protein structure and function Rafael Radi Dept. de Bioquímica and Cent. for Free Radical and Biomed. Res., Fac. de Med., Univ. de la República, Montevideo, Uruguay SFRRI Trevor Slater Award Lecture 18:00-18:50 Chair: Jose Vina, Spain TSAL The role of metabolic H2O2 generation: Redox signalling and oxidative stress Helmut Sies Inst. für Biochem. und Molekularbiologie I, Heinrich-Heine-Univ. Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany 28 SFRRI 2014 March 24 (Monday) Plenary Lecture 2 Mar. 23 (Sun) Room A 8:30-9:30 Chair: Toshihiko Ozawa, Japan PL2 Using stable free radicals to obtain unique and clinically useful data in vivo in human subjects Harold Swartz The Geisel Med. Sch. at Dartmouth, Hanover, NH, USA 9:30-9:40 Symposium 1: Redox-Active Iron in Disease Pathology and Treatment 9:40-11:40 Mar. 24 (Mon) Break Chairs: Shinya Toyokuni, Japan Des Richardson, Australia Sponsored by Informa Healthcare S01-1 Intracellular transport and export of nitric oxide in cancer cells as dinitrosyl iron complexes via glutathione S-transferase and MRP1 Des R. Richardson, Hiu Chuen Lok Dept. of Pathol., Univ. of Sydney, Australia S01-2 Cancer as a ferrotoxic disease Shinya Toyokuni Dept. of Pathol. Biol. Res., Nagoya Univ. Grad. Sch. of Med., Japan S01-3 Increased redox-active iron induces mitochondrial damage that recruits Parkin Kazuhiro Iwai Dept. of Mol. & Cell. Physiol., Grad. Sch. of Med., Kyoto Univ., Japan S01-4 The molecular and cellular effects of ascorbate on iron uptake from transferrin and intracellular iron trafficking in neoplastic cells Darius J R Lane, Sherin Chikhani, Vera Richardson, Des R. Richardson Mol. Pharmacol. and Pathol. Program, Dept. of Pathol. and Bosch Inst., Univ. of Sydney, Australia S01-5 Targeting lysosomal P-gp in cancer cells using redox active iron chelators Patric J. Jansson, Tetsuo Yamagishi, Akanksha Arwind, Des R. Richardson Dept. of Pathol. and Bosch Inst., Univ. of Sydney, Australia Break 11:40-11:50 SFRRI 2014 29 Scientific Program Meet the Professor 1 11:50-12:50 Chair: Yoshio Sumida, Japan Sponsored by Astareal Co., Ltd MP1 Astaxanthin and lipotoxicity-induced NASH Tsuguhito Ota Brain/Liver Interface Med. Res. Cent., Kanazawa Univ., Kanazawa, Japan Break 12:50-13:00 Symposium 2: Oxidative Damage of Proteins/Amino Acids and its Consequences 13:00-15:00 Chairs: Michael J. Davies, Australia Jan M. Gebicki, Australia S02-1 Rates, mechanisms and consequences of protein modification: the importance of quantitative data Michael J Davies The Heart Res. Inst., Australia S02-2 Thiyl radicals of protein cysteine residues: selective generation and catalytic potential in protein modification, aggregation and fragmentation Christian Schoneich Dept. of Pharm. Chem., Univ. of Kansas, USA S02-3 Electron-induced formation of glutathione peroxides Janusz M. Gebicki Dept. of Biol. Sci., Macquarie Univ., Australia S02-4 Cysteine oxidation in ROS signalling Philip Eaton King’s Coll. London, UK Coffee Break 15:00-15:20 Symposium 3: Oxidation of DNA/RNA and Signaling by Poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation 15:20-17:20 Chairs: Clare L. Hawkins, Australia Laszlo Virag, Hungary S03-1 Chemical and biochemical methods to measure oxidatively generated lesions within isolated and cellular DNA Jean Cadet1,2, J Richard Wagner2 1 Inst. Nanosci. and Cryogenie, CEA/Grenoble, France, 2Med. Univ. of Sherbrooke, Canada 30 SFRRI 2014 S03-2 Oxidative stress to RNA, a novel disease mechanism? Henrik E. Poulsen, Simon Frost, Trine Henriksen, Robert Bouchel, Allan Weimann Clinical Pharmacol. Lab Q7642, Bispebjerg Hosp., Univ. of Copenhagen, Denmark S03-3 Poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation as a redox signaling mechanism Laszlo Virag1,2, Agnieszka Robaszkiewicz1,4, Zsuzsanna Valko1, Katalin Kovacs2, Eva Szabo3, Peter Bay1,2 1 Dept. of Med. Chem., Med. and Health Sci. Cent., Univ. Debrecen, Hungary, 2Cell Biol. and Signaling Res. Group of the Hungarian Academy of Sci., Debrecen, Hungary, 3Dept. of Dermatol., Med. and Health Sci. Cent., Univ. of Debrecen, Hungary, 4Inst. of Veterinary Biochem. and Mol. Biol., Univ. of Zurich, Switzerland Mar. 24 (Mon) S03-4 Role of PARP1 in the regulation of mitochondrial function in health and in critical illness Csaba Szabo Dept. of Anesthesiol., Univ. of Texas Med. Branch and Shriners Burns Hosp. for Children, USA Evening Lecture 1 17:20-18:00 Chair: Koji Uchida, Japan EL1 Oxidized protein aggregates: Formation and pathophysiological role Tilman Grune Inst. of Nutr., Friedrich Schiller Univ., Jena, Germany SFRRI 2014 31 Scientific Program Room B1 Symposium 4: Oxidative Protein Folding and ER Stress 9:40-11:40 Chairs: Junichi Fujii, Japan David Ron, UK Sponsored by The Tokyo Biochemical Research Foundation S04-1 Protein folding homeostasis in the Endoplasmic Reticulum David Ron Univ. of Cambridge, UK S04-2 Structural and mechanistic basis of the protein disulfide bond formation network in mammalian cells Kenji Inaba Inst. Multidisc. Res., Tohoku Univ., Japan S04-3 The cellular response to hyperoxidizing conditions in the endoplasmic reticulum Lars Ellgaard1, Jonas D. Schmidt1, Cecilie L. Soltoft1, Thomas Ramming2, Henrik M. Geertz-Hansen3, Agnieszka S. Juncker3, Christian Appenzeller-Herzog2, Henning G. Hansen1 1 Dept. of Biol., Univ. of Copenhagen, Denmark, 2Dept. of Pharm. Sci., Univ. of Basel, Switzerland, 3Cent. for Biol. Sequence Analysis, Technical Univ. of Denmark, Denmark S04-4 Roles of ER stress sensors in early embryonic development of medaka fish Kazutoshi Mori Dept. of Biophys., Grad. Sch. of Sci., Kyoto Univ., Japan Break 11:40-11:50 Meet the Professor 2 11:50-12:50 Chair: Masayasu Inoue, Japan Sponsored by Mitsubishi Tanabe Pharma Corporation MP2 The role of oxidative stress in the pathogenesis of diabetic complications and the possible usefulness of anti-oxidative therapy Toyoshi Inoguchi Innovation Cent. for Med. Redox Navigation, Kyushu Univ., Fukuoka, Japan Break 32 SFRRI 2014 12:50-13:00 Symposium 5: Cutting-Edge Chemical Tools Accelerating Redox Biology and Medicine: From Basic Chemistry to Medical Applications 13:00-15:00 Chairs: Hidehiko Nakagawa, Japan Steven Bottle, Australia S05-1 Fluorescent probes for reversible, transient, and dynamic imaging of ROS in living cells Bo Tang Coll. of Chem., Chem. Eng. and Mater. Sci., Shandong Normal Univ., China Mar. 24 (Mon) S05-2 Design, synthesis and applications of fluorescent probes for molecular imaging of superoxide, peroxynitrite, and hypochlorous acid Dan Yang Morningside Lab. for Chem. Biol., Dept. of Chem., The Univ. of Hong Kong, China S05-3 Probing the radical-trapping reactivity of novel phenolic, aminic and organosulfur antioxidants using fluorescence Derek A Pratt Dept. of Chem., Univ. of Ottawa, Canada S05-4 Rational design of fluorogenic and luminogenic probes for redox biology Yasuteru Urano1,2 1 Grad. Sch. Med. and Pharm. Sci., The Univ. of Tokyo, Japan, 2Basic Res. Program, JST Coffee Break 15:00-15:20 Oral 1: Redox Signaling 15:20-16:20 Chairs: Hiroshi Ichikawa, Japan Toshihiko Osawa, Japan O1 Upregulated cytoglobin in fibroblasts and myofibroblasts may contribute to healing of gastric mucosal injuries during late healing phase Fumio Tanaka1, Kazunari Tominaga1, Tetsuya Tanigawa1, Toshio Watanabe1, Yasuhiro Fujiwara1, Norifumi Kawada2, Katsutoshi Yoshizato3, Tetsuo Arakawa1 1 Osaka City Univ., Grad. Sch. of Med., Dept. of Gastroenterol., Japan, 2Osaka City Univ., Grad. Sch. of Med., Dept. of Hepatol., 3PhoenixBio Co., Ltd. O2 Biochemical properties and functions of mitochondrial peroxiredoxin V Ju Hyun Sim1, Jiyoung Park1, Su-in Jo2, Sei Yoon Chu3, Dongmin Kang2, Sue Goo Rhee3, Hyun Ae Woo1 1 Coll. of Pharm., Ewha Womans Univ., Korea, 2Dept. of Life Sci., Ewha Womans Univ., 3Yonsei Biomed. Res. Inst., Yonsei Univ. Coll. of Med. SFRRI 2014 33 Scientific Program O3 The potential roles of PRDX4 as a thiol oxidase in endoplasmic reticulum Toshihiro Kurahashi1, Jaeyong Lee1, Atsunori Nabeshima2, Nobuyuki Shirasawa3, Sohsuke Yamada2, Toshifumi Takao4, Junichi Fujii1 1 Dept. of Biochem. and Mol. Biol., Grad. Sch. of Med. Sci., Yamagata Univ., Japan, 2Dept. of Pathol. and Cell Biol., Sch. of Med., Univ. of Occup. and Environ. Health, 3Dept. of Anat. and Struct. Sci., Sch of Med., Yamagata Univ., 4Inst. for Protein Res., Osaka Univ. O4 Scavenging and quenching effects of melanin on ROS and other reactive species Mika Tada1, Masaki Kobayashi2, Shigenobu Kasai3, Masahiro Kohno4, Yoshimi Niwano5 1 Cent. of General Education, Tohoku Inst. of Technol., Japan, 2Grad. Dept. of Electronics, Tohoku Inst. of Technol., 3Grad. Dept. of Env. Information Eng., Tohoku Inst. of Technol., 4Grad. Sch. of Biosci. and Biotechnol., Tokyo Inst. of Technol., 5 Grad. Sch. of Dent., Tohoku Univ. O5 Thioredoxin related protein of 14 kDa is an efficient L-cystine reductase and S-denitrosylase Irina Pader, Rajib Sengupta, Marcus Cebula, Jianqiang Xu, Arne Holmgren, Katarina Johansson, Elias S.J. Arner Div. of Biochem., Dept. of Med. Biochem. and Biophys., Karolinska Inst., Sweden Oral 2: Cancer 1 16:20-17:08 Chairs: Hideyuki Majima, Japan Young-Joon Surh, Korea O6 PI3Ks regulate the cystine/glutamate antiporter system xc- via eIF2alpha phosphorylation and ATF4 - a pathway active in glioblastomas and epilepsy Jan Lewerenz1, Paul Baxter2, Rebecca Kassubek1, Philipp Albrecht3, Joeri Van Liefferinge4, Ilse Smolders4, Axel Methner3, Ann Massie4, Giles E Hardingham2, Pamela Maher5 1 Dept. of Neurol., Ulm Univ., Germany, 2Cent. for Integrative Physiol., Univ. of Edinburgh, 3Dept. of Neurol., Heinrich-HeineUniv., Duesseldorf, 4Cent. for Neurosci., Vrije Univ. Brussel, 5Cellular Neurobiol. Lab., Salk Inst. for Biol. Studies O7 The role of Nrf2 in oxidative stress induced ovarian carcinogenesis Monique GP van der Wijst1, Christian Huisman1, Gerard Roelfes2, Marianne G Rots1 1 Epigenetic Editing, Dept. of Pathol. and Med. Biol., Univ. Med. Cent. Groningen, Univ. of Groningen, The Netherlands, 2 Stratingh Inst. for Chem., Univ. of Groningen, The Netherlands O8 Expression of CD44 variant 9 contributes to 5-fluorouracil resistance in gastric cancer through anti-oxidative stress mechanism Sawako Miyoshi1, Hidekazu Suzuki1, Hitoshi Tsugawa1, Tatsuhiro Masaoka1, Juntaro Matsuzaki1, Seiichiro Fukuhara1, Kenro Hirata2, Hideki Mori1, Takanori Kanai1, Hideyuki Saya3 1 Div. of Gastroentrol. and Hepatol., Dept. of Intern. Med., Keio Univ. Sch. of Med., Japan, 2Dept. of Gastroenterol., Saiseikai Utsunomiya Hosp., 3Inst. for Advanced Med. Res., Keio Univ. Sch. of Med. O9 A novel drug delivery system consisting of an antitumor agent tocopheryl succinate Kentaro Kogure1, Satoru Utsumi1, Yuki Fukuda1, Kayoko Nakayama1, Yuriko Okamura1, Susumu Hama1, Kenji Fukuzawa2 1 Dept. of Biophys. Chem., Kyoto Pharm. Univ., Japan, 2Fac. of Pharm., Yasuda Women’s Univ. 34 SFRRI 2014 Room B2 Morning School for Beginners 1: 7:30-8:20 Chair: Hirofumi Matsui, Japan Sponsored by CCFR What is oxidative stress Shinya Toyokuni Dept. of Pathol., Nagoya Univ. Grad. Sch. of Med.., Japan Symposium 6: Free Radicals, Radiation, Hormesis and Health Mar. 24 (Mon) Antioxidant system Junichi Fujii Dept. of Biochem. and Mol. Biol., Grad. Sch. of Med. Sci., Yamagata Univ., Japan 9:40-11:40 Chairs: William H. McBride, USA Kazunori Anzai, Japan S06-1 Pro- and anti-oxidant forces in low dose radiation responses Bill McBride Div. of Mol. and Cellular Oncol., Dept. of Radiation Oncol., and Pasarow Mass Spectrometry Lab., David Geffen Sch. of Med. at Univ. of California, Los Angeles, USA S06-2 Radiation-induced non-targeted effects: Transmission of genetic change mediated by oxidative stress? Carmel E Mothersill, Colin B Seymour Dept. of Med. Phys. and Appl. Radiation Sci., McMaster Univ., Canada S06-3 Low dose diagnostic CT radiation increases lifespan and decreases cancer risk in cancer prone mice Douglas R Boreham Northern Ontario Sch. of Med. and Bruce Power, Canada S06-4 Dietary inducers of an adaptive stress response Marc Birringer Dept. of Nutr. Food and Cons. Sci., Fulda Univ. of Appl. Sci., Germany Break 11:40-11:50 Meet the Professor 3 11:50-12:50 Chair: Shinya Toyokuni, Japan MP3 Challenge for plasma medical science and innovations Masaru Hori Plasma Med. Sci. Global Innovation Cent., Nagoya Univ., Nagoya, Japan SFRRI 2014 35 Scientific Program Break 12:50-13:00 Symposium 7: Antioxidants: Chemistry meets Epidemiology 13:00-15:00 Chairs: Maret Traber, USA Etsuo Niki, Japan S07-1 Role of antioxidants against ROS/RNS Etsuo Niki Kyoto Pref. Univ. of Med. and Natl. Inst. of Advanced Ind. Sci. & Technol., Japan S07-2 Nucleophilic tone: a new paradigm for the action of nutritional antioxidants Henry J Forman1,2, Kelvin J Davies1, Fulvio Ursini3 1 Davis Sch. of Gerontol., Univ. of Southern California, USA, 2Life and Env. Sci., Univ. of California, Merced, 3Univ. of Padova, Italy S07-3 Is redox signaling necessarily linked to an oxidative stress? Fulvio Ursini Dept. of Mol. Med., Univ. of Padova, Italy S07-4 Epidemiological, experimental and clinical vitamin E research Maret G. Traber Linus Pauling Inst., Oregon State Univ., USA Coffee Break 15:00-15:20 Oral 3: Novel Therapy 15:20-16:20 Chairs: Ken-ichi Yamada, Japan Hyeyoung Kim, Korea O10 Modulating myeloperoxidase-induced endothelial damage by a carbon monoxide-releasing molecule, CORM-3 Eric K. Patterson1, Alfredo Capretta2, Douglas D. Fraser1, Richard F. Potter1, Gediminas Cepinskas1 1 Cent. for Critical Illness Res., Lawson Health Res. Inst., Canada, 2Dept. of Chem., McMaster Univ., Hamilton, Canada O11 Nrf2 mediates the protective effect of mood stabilizer lithium against oxidative stress Jun-Feng Wang1,2, Joshua Rizak2, Hua Tan1 1 Dept. of Pharmacol. and Therap., Univ. of Manitoba, Canada, 2Dept. of Psychiatry, Univ. of British Columbia O12 Mechanistic studies of brain endothelial dysfunction in diabetic stroke Ziyan Zhang, Honglian Shi Dept. of Pharm. and Toxicol., Univ Kansas, USA 36 SFRRI 2014 O13 Attenuation of monoamine oxidase-A activity and its expression level in the brain as possible mechanisms of antidepressant-like action of flavonoids Yauhen Bandaruk, Rie Mukai, Junji Terao Grad. Sch. of Nutr. and Biosci., the Univ. of Tokushima, Japan O14 Protective effect of mitochondria-targeted nano-antioxidants on the hypoxia induced oxidative stress and apoptosis Yang Liu, Saipeng Huang, Libo Du Inst. of Chem., the Chinese Academy of Sci., China 16:20-17:08 Mar. 24 (Mon) Oral 4: Cardiovascular 1 Chairs: Corinne Spickett, UK Daniela Caporossi, Italy O15 Glutaredoxin 2 regulates vascular development by reversible glutathionylation of sirtuin 1 Lars Braeutigam1, Lasse D.E. Jensen2, Gereon Poschmann3, Klaudia Lepka4, Sergio J. Montano1, Orhan Aktas4, Kai Stuehler3, Yihai Cao2, Arne Holmgren1, Carsten Berndt1,4 1 Dept. of Med. Biochem. and Biophys., Karolinska Inst., Sweden, 2Dept. of Mol. Tumor and Cell Biol., Karolinska Inst., Stockholm, Sweden, 3Mol. Proteomics Lab., BMFZ, Heinrich-Heine-Univ., Duesseldorf, Germany, 4Neurol., HeinrichHeine-Univ., Duesseldorf, Germany O16 Cardiomyopathy in a mouse cardiac model of Friedreich’s ataxia involves the activation of the integrated stress response Michael L.H. Huang1, Sutharshani Sivagurunathan1, Samantha Ting1, Patric J Jansson1, Christopher J.D. Austin1, Matthew Kelly2,3, Christopher Semsarian2,3, Daohai Zhang1, Des R. Richardson1 1 Dept. of Pathol., Univ. of Sydney, Australia, 2Centenary Inst., Sydney, Australia, 3Dept. of Cardiol., Royal Prince Alfred Hosp., Sydney, Australia O17 PKG1alpha is a novel molecular target of HNO in the cardiovascular system Sonia Donzelli1, Oleksandra Prysyazhna2, Konstantina Stathopoulou1, Volkan Polat1, Philip Eaton2, Friederike Cuello1 1 Dept. of Experimental Pharmacol. and Toxikol., Univ. Med. Cent. Hamburg-Eppendorf, Germany, 2BHF Cent., King`s Coll. London, UK SFRRI 2014 37 Scientific Program Room K Oral 5: Oxidative Signaling 15:20-16:20 Chairs: Masayasu Inoue, Japan Lars Ellgaard, Denmark O18 Inducible nitric oxide synthase and ER stress-mediated apoptosis is decreased by sphingomyelinase inhibition in retinal pigment epithelial cells Mutay Aslan1, Ertan Kucuksayan1, Esma K. Konuk2, Nejdet Demir2, Bulent Mutus3 1 Dept. of Biochem., Akdeniz Univ. Med. Fac., Turkey, 2Dept. of Histol., Akdeniz Univ. Med. Fac., 3Dept. of Chem. and Biochem., Univ. of Windsor, Ontario, Canada O19 Reaction of lipid peroxyl radicals with transmembrane peptides: Mechanistic and structural aspects of tyrosine oxidation Silvina Bartesaghi1, Ariel Petruk2, Daniel Herrera1, Ari Zeida2, Marcelo Marti2, Dario Estrin2, Rafael Radi1 1 Dept. de Bioquimica, Cent. for Free Radical and Biomed. Res., Fac. de Med., Uruguay, 2INQUIMAE, Fac. de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Univ. de Buenos Aires, Argentina O20 A tracer analysis to demonstrate the role of endogenous CO as a systemic signal transmitter to suppress ROS induced cell injury Makoto Sawano1,2, Akito Shimouchi2, Tomoe Mizukami2 1 Dept. of Emergency Med. and Critical Care, Saitama Med. Cent., Saitama Med. Univ., Japan, 2Dept. of Cardiac Physiol., Natl. Cerebral and Cardiovascular Res. Cent. O21 Treatment of myofibroblast with CO enhances colonic epithelial cell restitution via inhibition of microRNA-710 and increase of FGF15 expression Kazuhiko Uchiyama, Yuji Naito, Tomohisa Takagi, Katsura Mizushima, Tetsuya Okayama, Kazuhiro Katada, Kazuhiro Kamada, Takeshi Ishikawa, Osamu Handa, Nobuaki Yagi, Toshikazu Yoshikawa, Yoshito Itoh Mol. Gastroenterol. and Hepatol., Kyoto Pref. Univ. of Med., Japan O22 Liver regeneration therapy for liver cirrhosis using cultured bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells with stabilization of redox homeostasis Taro Takami, Shuji Terai, Isao Sakaida Dept. of Gastroenterol. and Hepatol., Yamaguchi Univ. Grad. Sch. of Med., Japan Oral 6: Lipids 16:20-17:08 Chairs: Pierre Leroy, France Sue Goo Rhee, Korea O23 Biological activities of 7-dehydrocholesterol-derived oxysterols in cells Libin Xu1, Zeljka Korade2, Karoly Mirnics2, Ned A Porter1 1 Dept. of Chem. and Vanderbilt Inst. of Chem. Biol., Vanderbilt Univ., USA, 2Dept. of Psyc. and Vanderbilt Kennedy Cent., Vanderbilt Univ. 38 SFRRI 2014 O24 Mitochondrial impairment and oxidative stress in the pathogenesis of steatohepatitis: an issue of lipid quality Francesco Bellanti, Rosanna Tamborra, Giuseppina Iannelli, Maria Blonda, Domenica Mitarotonda, Gianluigi Vendemiale, Gaetano Serviddio Dept. of Med. and Surg. Sci., Univ. of Foggia, Italy Mar. 24 (Mon) O25 Analysis of photoreactivity of human retinal lipid extracts of different age groups Anna M Pawlak1, Agnieszka Broniec1, Andrzej Zadlo1, Mariusz Duda1, Olivier Berdeaux2, Stephane Gregoire2, Lionel Bretillon2, Tadeusz Sarna1 1 Dept. of Biophys., Fac. of Biochem. Bioph. and Biotechnol., Jagiellonian Univ., Poland, 2INRA, Univ. de Bourgogne, Dijon, France O26 Prosaposin regulates coenzyme Q10 levels in HepG2 cells especially those in mitochondria Misato Kashiba, Mikiko Oizumi, Masaru Suzuki, Yoshimi Sawamura, Kohei Nagashima, Hiroshi Moriuchi, Shinichi Yoshimura, Yorihiro Yamamoto Tokyo Univ. of Technol., Japan SFRRI 2014 39 Scientific Program March 25 (Tuesday) Room A Plenary Lecture 3 8:30-9:30 Chair: Michael J. Davies, Australia PL3 NADPH oxidases in Neutrophil Extracellular Traps Arturo Zychlinsky Dept. of Cell. Microbiol. at the Max Planck Inst. for Infect. Biol., Berlin, Germany Break 9:30-9:40 Symposium 8: Redox-Based Regulation of Cellular Processes 9:40-11:40 Chairs: Junji Yodoi, Japan Arne Holmgren, Sweden S08-1 Thioredoxin and glutaredoxin systems in DNA synthesis and control Arne Holmgren Dept. of Med. Biochem. and Biophys., Karolinska Inst., Sweden S08-2 Hyperoxidation of peroxiredoxin and circadian rhythm Sue-Goo Rhee, In Sup Kil Yonsei Biomed. Res. Inst., Yonsei Univ. Coll. of Med., Korea S08-3 Compartmentation of thiol-redox control in the eukaryotic cell Michel B. Toledano1, Joelle Vinh2, Giovanni Chiappetta2, Shakir Shakir2, Agnes Delaunay-Moisan1, Alise Ponsero1, Aeid Igbaria1, Samia Miled1 1 CEA/IBITECS/LSOC, CEA-Saclay France, France, 2SMBP CNRS USR3149 S08-4 Redox modulation of pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory signaling Young-Joon Surh Coll. of Pharm., Seoul Natl. Univ., Korea S08-5 Development of redox modulating approaches against cancer and diabetes by Thioredoxin binding protein-2 (TBP-2)/ Txnip Hiroshi Masutani, Cristiane Lumi Hirata Inst. for Virus Res., Kyoto Univ., Japan Break 40 SFRRI 2014 11:40-11:50 Meet the Professor 4 11:50-12:50 Chair: Jiri Neuzil, Australia Sponsored by Otsuka Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. MP4-1 Gastric agressive factors are oxidative stressors Hirofumi Matsui Fac. of Med., Univ. of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Japan MP4-2 Rancid radical talk: Music of mitochondrial cardiolipins Valerian E. Kagan Cent. for Free Radical and Antioxidant Health, Dept. of Environ. Health, Univ. of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, USA Break 12:50-13:00 Symposium 9: Modulation of Oxidative Processes by Gaseous Molecules 13:00-15:00 Chairs: Takaaki Akaike, Japan Gediminas Cepinskas, Canada Sponsored by ERATO SUEMATSU Gas Biology Project Mar. 25 (Tue) S09-1 Formation and regulation of electrophilic signaling mediated by 8-nitro-cGMP Takaaki Akaike Dept. of Environ. Health Sci. and Mol. Toxicol., Tohoku Univ. Grad. Sch. Med., Japan S09-2 Bacterial sensing by macrophages through carbon monoxide-dependent inflammasome activation Leo E. Otterbein1, Barbara Wegiel1, Rasmus Larsen2, David Gallo1, Beek Yoke Chin1, Patty Lee4, Praveen Mannam4, Brian S Zuckerbraun3, Richard Flavell4, Miguel Soares2 1 Beth Israel Deaconess Med. Cent./Harvard Med. Sch., USA, 2Gulbenkian Inst., 3Univ. of Pittsburgh, 4Yale Univ. Sch. of Med. S09-3 Redox biology of hydrogen sulfide Jon M Fukuto, Katsuhiko Ono, Henry Le Dept. of Chem., Sonoma State Univ., USA S09-4 Inhibition of vascular smooth muscle cell proliferation by truncated heme oxygenase-1 Roland Stocker, Jun Ni, Magda Lam, Ghassan Maghzal Victor Chang Cardiac Res. Inst., Australia S09-5 PFKFB3 demethylation regulates CO/CBS-dependent directional glucose biotransformation to pentose phosphate pathway as an anti-oxidative mechanism for cancer cell survival and chemoresistance Makoto Suematsu1,2, Takehiro Yamamoto1, Kyoko Ishiwata1, Mitsuyo Ohmura1, Akiko Kubo1, Takako Hishiki1 1 Dept. of Biochem., Sch. of Med., Keio Univ., Japan, 2JST ERATO Suematsu Gas Biol. Project SFRRI 2014 41 Scientific Program Coffee Break 15:00-15:20 Symposium 10: Nrf2 – A Regulator of Redox Signaling and Antioxidant Defenses in Health and Disease 15:20-17:20 Chairs: Giovanni E. Mann, UK Henry Forman, USA Sponsored by SFRBM S10-1 Keap1-Nrf2 regulatory system in health and diseases Masayuki Yamamoto, Takafumi Suzuki, Toshiaki Fukutomi, Yoko Yagishita, Akira Uruno Dept. of Med. Biochem., Tohoku Univ. Grad. Sch. of Med., Japan S10-2 The Nrf2 regulatory network: a gatekeeper against oxidative and electrophile stress John D. Hayes, Sudhir Chowdhry, Calum Sutherland Med. Res. Inst., Ninewells Hosp. and Med. Sch., Univ. of Dundee, Scotland, UK S10-3 Keap1-Nrf2 signaling: a target for cancer prevention by sulforaphane Thomas W Kensler1, Patricia A Egner2, Alvaro Munoz2, John D Groopman2, Jed W Fahey2, Paul Talalay2, Stephen S Hecht3, Tao-Yang Chen4, Jian-Guo Chen4 1 Dept. Pharmacol. and Chem. Biol., Univ. Pittsburgh, USA, 2Johns Hopkins Univ., Baltimore, USA, 3Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolois, USA, 4Qidong Liver Cancer Inst., Qidong, China S10-4 In utero programing of impaired Nrf2 mediated redox signaling in fetal vascular cells Giovanni E. Mann, Sarah J. Chapple, Xinghua Cheng, Bijal Patel, Richard C. Siow BHF Cent. of Res. Excellence, Sch. of Med., King’s Coll. London, UK Evening Lecture 2 17:20-18:00 Chair: Young-Joon Surh, Korea Sponsored by SFRR Asia EL2 Regulation of human mitochondrial function by Sirt3-mediated deacetylation of respiratory enzymes under oxidative stress Yau-Huei Wei1, Yu Ting Wu2 1 Dept. of Med., Mackay Med. Coll., New Taipei City, Taiwan, 2Dept. of Biochem. and Mol. Biol., Natl. Yang-Ming Univ., Taiwan SFRRI Annual General Meeting 42 SFRRI 2014 18:00-19:00 Room B1 Symposium 11: Redox Molecular Imaging 9:40-11:40 Chairs: Kazuhiro Ichikawa, Japan Howard J. Halpern, USA S11-1 Biological application of EPR imaging of oxygen in tumors Howard J. Halpern1,2, Boris Epel1,2, Martyna Elas1,2,3, Gage Redler1,2, Kay Macleod2, Nanduri Prabkahar2, Zvi Fuchs4, Richard Kolesnick4, Ralph Weichselbaum1, Victor Tormyshev2,5 1 Dept. of Radiation and Cell. Oncol., Univ. of Chicago, USA, 2Cent. for Electron Paramagnetic Resonance Imaging In Vivo Physiol., Univ. of Chicago, 3Fac. Bio-chem., Biophys. and Biotechnol., Jagiellonian Univ., Krakow, Poland, 4Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Cent., New York, 5Novosibirsk Inst. of Organic Chem., Russia S11-2 Measurement and mechanism of oxygen in myocardial tissue injury and protection Periannan Kuppusamy Geisel Sch. of Med., Dartmouth Coll., USA Mar. 25 (Tue) S11-3 Quantitative EPR oxygen imaging guided treatment in pancreatic cancer Shingo Matsumoto1, Keita Saito1, Yoichi Takakusagi1, Masayuki Matsuo1, Jeeva P. Munasinghe2, Nallathamby Devasahayam1, Sankaran Suburamanian1, James B. Mitchell1, Murali C. Krishna1 1 Radiation Biol. Branch, Natl. Cancer Inst., NIH, Bethesda, USA, 2Natl. Inst. of Neurol. Disorder and Stroke, NIH, Bethesda, USA S11-4 Development of redox molecular imaging of free radicals in living animal Hideo Utsumi, Fuminori Hyodo1, Keiji Yasukawa2, Mayumi Yamato1, Shinji Ito1, Tatsuya Naganuma3, Kazuhiro Ichikawa1, Ryoma Kobayashi1 1 Innovation Cent. for Med. Redox Navigation, Kyushu Univ., Japan, 2Fac. of Pharm. Sci., Kyushu Univ., 3Japan Redox Ltd. Break 11:40-11:50 Meet the Professor 5 11:50-12:50 Chair: Kazunori Anzai, Japan Sponsored by Japanese Society Alpha-Lipoic of Acid MP5-1 Historical background and recent topics of lipoic acid research Seiichi Matsugo1, Yoshiki Koriyama2, Osamu Hori3 1 Fac. of Nat. Sys., Inst. of Sci. and Eng., Kanazawa Univ., Kanazawa, Japan 2 Dept. of Mol. Neurobiol. and 3Dept. of Neuroanatomy, Grad. Sch. of Med., Kanazawa Univ., Kanazawa, Japan SFRRI 2014 43 Scientific Program MP5-2 Nutrition and healthy ageing—from calorie restriction to MediterrAsian diet and lipoic acid Gerald Rimbach Inst. of Human Nutr. and Food Sci., Univ. of Kiel, Kiel, Germany Break 12:50-13:00 Symposium 12: The Yin and Yang of Redox Host Defense against Infection 13:00-15:00 Chairs: Lin L. Mantell, USA Douglas Thomas, USA S12-1 Redox regulation of community behavior in Pseudomonas aeruginosa Lars E. P. Dietrich Dept. of Biol. Sci., Columbia Univ., USA S12-2 Nox and Duox family of NADPH oxidases in host defense and inflammatory responses to infection Thomas L Leto, Howard E. Boudreau, Jaeyul Kwon, Devin J. Burke, Benjamin W. Casterline, Balazs Rada Natl. Inst. of Allergy and Infect. Dis., Natl. Inst. of Health, USA S12-3 The role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in gastric carcinogenesis evoked by H. pylori infection Hitoshi Tsugawa1,2, Hidekazu Suzuki1,2 1 Cent. for Integrated Med. Res., Keio Univ., Japan, 2Div. Gast. Hepatol., Dept. Int. Med., Keio Univ., Sch. of Med. S12-4 HMGB1 mediates oxygen toxicity-compromised innate immunity in ventilator-associated pneumonia Lin L Mantell1,2, Vivek Patel1, Ravikumar Sitapara1, Lokesh Sharma1, Kevin J Tracey2 1 Dept. of Pharm. Sci, St. John’s Univ., Coll. of Pharm. and Health Sci., NY, USA, 2The Feinstein Inst. for Med. Res., NS-LIJ Health Sys., NY Coffee Break Oral 7: Free Radical Chemistry 15:00-15:20 15:20-16:08 Chairs: Keiichiro Suzuki, Japan Jean Cadet, France O27 Development for direct detection of OH radicals emanated from human skin using LIF technique Dock-Chil Che1, Akito Shimouchi2, Tomoe Mizukami2, Kazutoshi Nose2 1 Dept. of Chem., Grad. Sch. of Sci., Osaka Univ., Japan, 2Dept. of Cardiac Physiol., Natl. Cerebral and Cardiovascular Res. Cent. O29 A novel role for endogenous bilirubin in protecting from adenine induced kidney damage Connie Boon1, Vinod Gopalan2, Alfred Lam2, Jeff S Coombes3, Robert G Fassett3, Andrew C Bulmer1 1 Heart Found. Res. Cent., Griffith Health Inst., Griffith Univ., Australia, 2Sch. of Med., Dept. of Pathol., Griffith Univ., Australia, 3Sch. of Human Movement Studies, Univ. of Queensland, Australia 44 SFRRI 2014 O30 Hydroxyl radical-dependent chemiluminescence emission during advanced oxidation of haloaromatics Ben-Zhan Zhu, Li Mao Res. Cent. for Eco-Environ. Sci.; The Chinese Academy of Sci., China Oral 8: Metabolic Syndrome 16:08-16:56 Chairs: Hiroto Kimura, Japan Kimitaka Takitani, Japan O31 Detection of S-(2-succinyl)cystein (2SC) in adipocytes and in serum by LC-MS/MS as a marker for adipocyte metabolism Ryoji Nagai, Jun-ichi Shirakawa, Masatoshi Shinagawa, Rei-ichi Ohno, Mime Nagai Dept. of Biosci. Sch. of Agri., Tokai Univ., Japan O32 New insights into metabolic regulation by protein-tyrosine phosphatase 1B Fawaz Haj Dept. of Nutr. and Intern. Med., Univ. of California Davis, USA Mar. 25 (Tue) O33 Lipid peroxidation in pancreatic beta-cells in diabetes: the sweet road from hormesis to disaster Shlomo Sasson, Guy Cohen Dept. of Pharmacol., Inst. for Drug Res., Fac. of Med., The Hebrew Univ. of Jerusalem, Israel O34 Oxidative stress down-regulates sirt3-mediated deacetylation of respiratory enzymes Yu Ting Wu1,2, Yau-Huei Wei1,2 1 Dept. of Med., Mackay Med. Coll., New Taipei City, Taiwan, 2Dept. of Biochem. and Mol. Biol., Natl. Yang-Ming Univ., Taipei SFRRI 2014 45 Scientific Program Room B2 Morning School for Beginners 2 7:30-8:20 Chair: Hirofumi Matsui, Japan Sponsored by CCFR Oxidative stress marker 1 Hiroshi Ichikawa Fac. of Life and Med. Sci., Doshisha Univ., Japan Oxidative stress marker 2 Hidehiko Nakagawa Grad. Sch. of Pharm. Sci., Nagoya City Univ., Japan Symposium 13: Redox Biology of Insulin and its Resistance 9:40-11:40 Chairs: Holger Steinbrenner, Germany Enrique Cadenas, USA S13-1 Interference of the micronutrient selenium with the insulin-regulated energy metabolism Holger Steinbrenner Inst. for Biochem. and Mol. Biol. I, Heinrich-Heine-Univ., Duesseldorf, Germany S13-2 A novel role for selenoprotein P in the regulation of insulin sensitivity Hirofumi Misu1, Yoshiro Saito2, Kazuhiko Takahashi3, Toshinari Takamura1, Shuichi Kaneko1 1 Dept. of Dis. Cont. and Homeost., Kanazawa Univ., Japan, 2Dept. of Med. Life Sys, Fac. of Med. and Life Sci., Doshisha Univ., 3Dept. of Nutr. Biochem., Hokkaido Pharm. Univ. S13-3 Reactive oxygen species (ROS), insulin hypersecretion and type 2 diabetes Barbara E. Corkey, Deeney T Deeney, Karel A Erion, Charles Berdan, Nathan E Burritt, Orian S Shirihai Obesity Res. Cent., Dept. of Med., Boston Univ. Sch. of Med., USA S13-4 Impact of glutathione peroxidase (GPX) and the GPX mimic ebselen on pancreatic insulin secretion Xin Gen Lei, Xinhui Wang Dept. of Animal Sci., Cornell Univ., USA Break 11:40-11:50 Meet the Professor 6 11:50-12:50 Chair: Akira Ando, Japan Sponsored by Kyowa Kirin & ZERIA Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. MP-6 Cutting-edge of therapeutic strategies for patients with refractory IBD: Clinical and molecular investigation Satoshi Tanida Dept. of Gastroenterol. and Metab., Nagoya City Univ. Grad. Sch. of Med. Sci., Nagoya, Japan 46 SFRRI 2014 Break 12:50-13:00 Symposium 14: ROS in Peripheral Motor Neurons: The Key to ALS and Age-Related Loss of Skeletal Muscles? 13:00-15:00 Chairs: Malcolm J. Jackson, UK Holly Van Remmen, USA S14-1 Understanding the role of superoxide dismutase and tyrosine nitration in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Joseph S Beckman Linus Pauling Inst., Oregon State Univ., USA S14-3 Nerve-muscle redox interactions and the maintenance of muscle mass during ageing Malcolm J Jackson, Aphrodite Vasilaki, Giorgos Sakellariou, Siobhan Scullion, Natalie Pollock, Anne McArdle Inst. of Ageing and Chronic Dis., Univ. of Liverpool, UK S14-4 Exercise as an intervention to preserve central and peripheral nerve function during ageing Zsolt Radak Fac. of PE and Sport Sci., Semmelweis Univ., Hungary Coffee Break 15:00-15:20 Sponsored Session: Japanese Coenzyme Q Association 15:20-17:20 Mar. 25 (Tue) S14-5 Redox regulation of muscle E3 ubiquitin ligases: role in sarcopenia Jose Vina1, Mari Carmen Gomez Cabrera1, Beatriz Ferrando1, Arlette Delamarche2, Frederic Derbre1 1 The Univ. of Valencia, Spain, 2Univ. of Rennes, France Sponsored by Japanese Coenzyme Q Association SPS-1 Coenzyme Q10 in health and diseases Plácido Navas Cent. Andaluz de Biología del Desarrollo, Univ. Pablo de Olavide-CSIC-JA and CIBERER, Inst. de Salud Carlos III, Seville, Spain SPS-2 Coenzyme Q10: a metabolic approach to improve heart failure outcome S. A. Mortensen DMSc, EFESC on behalf of the Q-SYMBIO Study Investigators SPS-3 A potential link between the stress protein heme oxygenase-1 and coenzyme Q R Stocker1, LL Dunn1, KH Chan2, S Kong1, C Suarna1, DL Newington1, A Ayer1, RG Midwinter3, CF Clarke4, J Cantley5, DE James5, GJ Maghzal1, MKC Ng2 1 The Victor Chang Cardiac Res. Inst. and The Univ. of New South Wales, 2The Heart Res. Inst., Sydney, Australia, 3 The Univ. of Sydney, 4Dept. of Chem. and Biochem., Univ. of California, Los Angeles, USA, 5Garvan Inst. of Med. Res. SPS-4 The role of prosaposin and saposin B as the coenzyme Q10 binding and transfer protein Yorihiro Yamamoto1, Makoto Hasegawa1, Kazunari Takase1, Mayuko Nishimura1, Miyoshi Nagao1, Yoshihiro Yamazaki1, Yuki Kakizawa1, Hiroshi Moriuchi1, Junko Matsuda2, Misato Kashiba1, Shinichi Yoshimura2 1 Sch. of Biosci. and Biotechnol., Tokyo Univ. of Tech., 2Tokai Univ. SFRRI 2014 47 Scientific Program Room K Oral 9: NO 15:20-16:08 Chairs: Michael B Toledano, France Roland Stocker, Australia O35 A Potential role of iNOS promoter polymorphisms in pathology of P.vivax and P. falciparum infection in malaria endemic population of Jharkhand, India Sohail Mohammad1, Krishn P Singh2, Shadab Anwar2, Ajay Kumar Sharma1, Vahab Ali2, Binay Kumar3, Pradeep Das2, Tridibes Adak4, Raziuddin Mohammad1 1 Univ. Dept. of Zool., Vinoba Bhave Univ., India, 2Div. of Biochem. and Mol. Biol., RMRIMS, Agamkuan, Patna, India, 3 Civil Surg., Sadar Hosp., Hazaribag, Jharkhand, India, 4NIMR, Dawarka, New-Delhi, India O36 iNOS (inducible nitric oxide synthase) and NO donor induce S-nitrosylation and inactivation of Sirt1, a key regulator of cell fate and metabolism Kyungho Chang1, Masao Kaneki2, Nobuyuki Shimizu3 1 Dept. of Anesthesiol., Grad. Sch. of Med., Univ. of Tokyo, Japan, 2Dept. of Anesthesia, Massachusetts General Hosp., Harvard Med. Sch., 3Int’l Univ. of Health and Welfare O37 SNO-trap: a powerful approach to the discovery of proteins regulated by reversible S-nitrosylation Moran Benhar1, Shani Ben-Lulu1, Pnina Weisman-Shomer1, Tamar Ziv2 1 Technion-Israel Inst. of Technol., Israel, 2Smoler Protein Res. Cent. and Fac. of Biol., Technion, Haifa, Israel O38 Biochemical characterization of mitochondrial complex III inhibition by nitric oxide Laura B. Valdez, Dario E. Iglesias, Silvina S. Bombicino, Alberto Boveris Inst. of Biochem. and Mol. Med. (IBIMOL, UBA-CONICET), Sch. of Pharm. and Biochem., UBA, Argentina Oral 10: Neuroscience 16:08-16:56 Chairs: Masaichi Lee, Japan Joao Laranjinha, Portugal O39 Reperfusion-reoxygenation injury in fetal brains is diagnosed by magnetic resonance imaging and causes hypertonia by a mechanism involving oxidants Sidhartha Tan1, Alexander Drobyshevsky1, Kehuan Luo1, Ines Batinic-Haberle3, Jeannette Vasquez-Vivar2 1 Dept. Pediatrics, North Shore Univ. Health Sys. and Univ. of Chicago, USA, 2Med. Coll. of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, USA, 3 Duke Univ., Durham, USA O40 Dopamine-mediated oxidation of methionine 127 in alpha-synuclein causes cytotoxicity and oligomerization of alpha-synuclein Kazuhiro Nakaso, Naoko Tajima, Yosuke Horikoshi, Tatsuya Matsura Dept. of Med. Biochem., Tottori Univ. Fac. of Med., Japan 48 SFRRI 2014 O41 T-butyl bisphenol protects cerebral tissues from ischaemic injury Paul Witting1, Hong Duong2, Aisling McMahon2, Genevieve Fong1, Joanne Dennis1, Saul Freedman2 1 Discipline of Pathol., The Univ. of Sydney, Australia, 2ANZAC Res. Inst., Concord, Australia O42 Glutaredoxin 2 protects against oligodendroglial cell death during neuroinflammation Klaudia Lepka1, K Volbracht1, N Voevodskaya2, E Bill3, H P Hartung1, Arne Holmgren4, Orhan Aktas1, C Berndt1,4 1 Neurol., Heinrich-Heine-Univ. Duesseldorf, Germany, 2Dept. of Biochem. and Biophys., Stockholm Univ., Sweden, 3 Max-Planck Inst. for Inorganic Biochem., Muelheim, Germany, 4Med. Biochem. and Biophys., Karolinska Inst., Stockholm, Sweden O43 Lack of APC/C-Cdh E3 ubiquitin ligase causes abnormal re-entry of neurons into cell cycle and glutamate excitotoxicity in Alzheimer’s disease Jose Vina, Tanja Fuchsberger, Esther Giraldo, Ana Lloret Dept. of Physiol. Univ. of Valencia, Spain Mar. 25 (Tue) SFRRI 2014 49 Scientific Program March 26 (Wednesday) Room A Plenary Lecture 4 8:30-9:30 Chair: Yuji Naito, Japan Sponsored by JCBN PL4 Redox regulation in cancer stem cells by CD44-xCT axis Hideyuki Saya Div. of Gene Regulation, Inst. for Advanced Med. Res. (IAMR), Sch. of Med., Keio Univ., Tokyo Japan Break 9:30-9:40 Symposium 15: Signal Network of ROS, NO and S-Nitrosothiols 9:40-11:40 Chairs: Chang Chen, China Alfonso Pompella, Italy S15-1 The role of gamma-glutamyltransferase and redoxins in S-nitrosothiols metabolism and bioactivity in the vascular system Pierre Leroy1, Fatima Dahboul1, Caroline Perrin-Sarrado1, Caroline Gaucher1, Alfonso Pompella2 1 Univ. of Lorraine, CITHEFOR, France, 2Med. Sch., Univ. of Pisa, Italy S15-2 Nitrite and nitrate in health, disease and therapeutics Daniel B Kim-Shapiro Dept. of Phys. and Translational Sci. Cent., Wake Forest Univ., USA S15-3 Regulation of protein S-nitrosylation and protection against carcinogenesis by S-nitrosoglutathione reductase Limin Liu Dept. of Microbiol. and Immunol., Univ. of California, San Francisco, USA S15-4 The critical role of Dimethylarginine Dimethylaminohydrolase-1 in regulating endogenous nitric oxide synthase inhibitors and heart failure development Yingjie Chen Univ. of Minnesota, USA Break 50 SFRRI 2014 11:40-11:50 Meet the Professor 7 11:50-12:50 Chair: Hidekazu Suzuki, Japan Sponsored by Eisai Co., Ltd. MP7-1 Oxidative stress and ER stress related signaling pathways in cardiovascular system Nesrin Kartal Özer Dept. of Biochem., Fac. of Med., Genetic and Metab. Dis. Res. Cent. (GEMHAM) Marmara Univ., Istanbul, Turkey MP7-2 Helicobacter pylori infection and oxidative stress Osamu Handa Dept. of Mol. Gastroenterol. and Hepatol., Kyoto Pref Univ. of Med., Kyoto, Japan Break 12:50-13:00 Symposium 16: Power Struggle between Repair and Cell Death 13:00-15:00 Chairs: Noriko Noguchi, Japan Victor Darley-Usmar, USA S16-1 Novel lipid peroxidation dependent cell death by deficiency of PHGPx Hirotaka Imai Sch. of Pharm. Sci. Kitasato Univ., Japan S16-2 Mitochondrial regulation of macrophage cholesterol homeostasis Annette Graham, Anne Marie Allen, Janice M Taylor Dept. of Life Sci., Sch. of Health and Life Sci., Glasgow Caledonian Univ., UK Mar. 26 (Wed) S16-3 New aspects of 24S-hydroxycholesterol in modulating neuronal cell death Noriko Noguchi Fac. of Life and Med. Sci., Doshisha Univ., Japan S16-4 Bench to beside for the powerhouse of the cell: Translational bioenergetics Victor M Darley-Usmar Cent. for Free Radical Biol. Univ. of Alabama at Birmingham, USA S16-5 Metabolic struggle of G6PD-deficient cells upon oxidant challenge Daniel Tsun-Yee Chiu1,2 1 Dept. of Med. Biotechnol. and Lab. Sci., Chang Gung Univ., Taiwan, 2Dept. of Lab. Med., Chang Gung Memorial Hosp., Taiwan Coffee Break 15:00-15:20 SFRRI 2014 51 Scientific Program Oral 11: Redox Imaging 15:20-15:56 Chair: Steven Bottle, Australia O44 Potential of collagen-like triple helical peptides as spin probe-peptide conjugates: their application of evaluating redox status of living animals Hiroyuki Yasui1, Chisato M Yamazaki2, Hiroshi Nose3, Chihiro Awada4, Toshifumi Takao4, Takaki Koide2 1 Dept. of Analytical and Bioinorganic Chem., Kyoto Pharm. Univ., Japan, 2Dept. of Chem. and Biochem., Sch. of Advanced Sci. and Eng., Waseda Univ., 3Kola-Gen Pharma InCorp., 4Lab. of Protein Profiling and Functional Proteomics, Inst. for Protein Res., Osaka Univ. O45 Reactive oxygen species and nitric balance determines the artery smooth muscle tension and thrombotic process: visualization by in vivo imaging Satoshi Nishimura Jichi Med. Univ., Cent. for Mol. Med., the Univ. of Tokyo, Japan O46 A unique, mitochondrially-targeted, redox-responsive probe Steven E Bottle1, Kokleong Chong1, Kathryn E Fairfull-Smith1, Martin Lavin2 1 Fac. of Sci. and Eng., Queensland Univ. of Technol., Australia, 2QIMR, Royal Brisbane Hosp., Herston, Australia Evening Lecture 3 16:00-16:40 Chair: Ceser Fraga, Argentina EL3 The oncogenic properties of the redox inflammatory protein inducible nitric oxide synthase in ERa(-) breast cancer. New insights into potential therapeutic targets David A. Wink1, Julie Heinecke1, Lisa A. Ridnour1, Robert Cheng1, Christopher W. Switzer1,2, Sharon Glynn1,3, Stefan Ambs4 1 Radiation Biol. Branch, Natl. Cancer Inst., Natl. Inst. of Health, Bethesda, USA, 2The Rayne Inst., King Coll., London, UK, 3 Prostate Cancer Inst., NUI Galway, Ireland, 3LHC, CCR, NCI, 4Lab. of Human Carcinogenesis, Natl. Inst. of Health, Bethesda, USA Evening Lecture 4 16:40-17:20 Chair: Yang Liu, China Sponsored by SFRR Asia EL4 Mechanism-based drug design: A bis-resorcinol congener of resveratrol as a potential of anti-ulcer drug Sudhir K. Yadav, Subrata Chattopadhyay Bio-Organic Div., Bhabha Atomic Res. Cent., Mumbai, India Break 17:20-17:30 Closing Remarks & Award Ceremony 17:30-18:00 Chairs of SFRRI2014: Yuji Naito, Japan Shinya Toyokuni, Japan 52 SFRRI 2014 Room B1 Symposium 17: Oxidative Stress and Autophagy 9:40-11:40 Chairs: Jianhua Zhang, USA Keiji Tanaka, Japan S17-1 Oxidative stress, mitophagy, and the PINK1-Parkin system Keiji Tanaka Tokyo Metropolitan Inst. of Med. Sci., Japan S17-2 Regulation of innate immune response by autophagy Tatsuya Saitoh Lab. of Host Defense, Immunol. Frontier Res. Cent., Osaka Univ., Japan S17-3 Phosphorylation of p62 activates the Keap1-Nrf2 pathway during selective autophagy Masaaki Komatsu Protein Metab. Project, Tokyo Met. Inst. Med. Sci., Japan S17-4 Metabolic regulation of autophagy and bioenergetics Jianhua Zhang Dept. of Path., Univ. Alabama, Birmingham, USA Break 11:40-11:50 Meet the Professor 8 11:50-12:50 Mar. 26 (Wed) Chair: Yuji Naito, Japan Sponsored by JIMRO Co., Ltd. MP8-1 Apoptotic cell injection ameliorates intestinal inflammation—possible mechanism of granulocyte/monocyte apheresis Shunji Ishihara Dept. of Internal Med. II, Shimane Univ. Sch. of Med., Izumo, Japan MP8-2 Peroxiredoxin-6 in inflammatory bowel disease Tomohisa Takagi Mol. Gastroenterol. and Hepatol., Grad. Sch. of Med. Sci., Kyoto Pref. Univ. of Med., Kyoto, Japan Break 12:50-13:00 SFRRI 2014 53 Scientific Program Symposium 18: Reactive Oxygen Species in Non-Apoptotic Cell Death Signaling and Necropathies 13:00-15:00 Chairs: Marcus Conrad, Germany Peter Vandenabeele, Belgium S18-1 Molecular mechanism of necroptosis: MLKL compromises plasma membrane integrity Yves Dondelinger,1,2 Wim Declercq,1,2 Sylvie Montessuit,3 Ria Roelandt,1,2 Amanda Goncalves,4 Inge Bruggeman,1,2 Paco Hulpiau,1,2 Kathrin Weber,1,2 Savvas Savvides,5 Jean-Claude Martinou,3 Mathieu JM Bertrand,1,2 Peter Vandenabeele1,2,6 1 VIB Inflam. Res. Cent., Belgium, 2Dept. of Biomed. Mol. Biol., Ghent Univ., 3Dept. of Cell Biol., Univ. of Geneva, 4 Microscopy Core Facility, Dept. for Mol. Biomed. Res., VIB/Ghent Univ., 5Unit for Struct. Biol. and Biophys., Lab. for Protein Biochem. and Biomol. Eng., Ghent Univ., 6Methusalem Program, Ghent Univ. S18-2 Reacting to ROS and DAMPs - making amends: The ‘Damage Associated Molecular Pattern (DAMP) hypothesis’ in cancer biology Michael T. Lotze Univ. of Pittsburgh, USA S18-3 Alternative HMGB1 redox states in the tissue response to cell death Marco Bianchi, Emilie Venereau Div. of Genetics and Cell Biol., San Raffaele Sci. Inst. and Univ., Italy S18-4 ROS-mediated modulation of necroptosis by Smac mimetic Simone Fulda Inst. for Experimental Cancer Res. in Pediatr., Goethe-Univ. Frankfurt, Germany S18-5 Probing cell death with small molecules Brent R. Stockwell Howard Hughes Med. Inst., Columbia Univ., New York, USA Coffee Break 15:00-15:20 Oral 12: Aging 15:20-16:08 Chairs: Juan Sastre, Spain Peter Rabinovitch, USA O47 Brain iron accumulation exacerbates the pathogenesis of MPTP-induced Parkinson’s disease Lin-Hao You, Fei Li, Lan Wang, Peng Yu, Shu-E Zhao, Yan-Zhong Chang Dept. of Life Sci., Hebei Normal Univ., China O48 Mitochondrial theory of reproduction and ovarian aging Masayasu Inoue1, Eisuke F Sato3, Shu Hashimoto2, Yoshiharu Morimoto2 1 Health Sci. Lab., Japan, 2IVF Japan, 3Suzuka Univ. of Med. Sci. 54 SFRRI 2014 O49 Propanoylation of amyloid is the key post-translational modification to enhance its aggregability and neurotoxicity in Alzheimer disease Shinsuke Hisaka1, Hiroyasu Akatsu2, Masayo Shamoto-Nagai3, Yoji Kato4, Mitsuhiko Nose1, Wakako Maruyama3, Toshihiko Osawa5 1 Fac. of Pharm., Meijo Univ., Japan, 2Fukushimura Hosp., 3Natl. Cent. of Geriatrics and Gerontol., 4Sch. of Human Sci. and Environ., Univ. of Hyogo, 5Fac. of Psychol. and Phys. Sci., Aichi Gakuin Univ. O50 C. elegans as a model for investigations into basic mechanisms of ageing what can and cannot be learned? Jan Gruber1,2, Li Fang Ng1, Rudiyanto Gunawan3, Barry Halliwell1 1 Dept. of Biochem. Natl. Univ. of Singapore, Yale-NUS Coll., Singapore, 2Yale-NUS Coll., Singapore, 3Inst. for Chem. and Bioeng., ETH Zurich, Switzerland Oral 13: Cancer 2 16:08-16:56 Chairs: Futoshi Okada, Japan Marco Bianchi, Italy O51 CBX7 expression is associated with poor prognosis in ovarian clear cell adenocarcinoma via TRAIL-induced apoptotic pathway regulation Yoriko Yamashita1, Kanako Shinjo2, Shinya Akatsuka2, Shinya Toyokuni2 1 Dept. of Experimental Pathol. and Tumor Biol., Nagoya City Univ. Grad. Sch. of Med. Sci., Japan, 2Dept. of Pathol. and Biol. Responses, Nagoya Univ. Grad. Sch. of Med. O52 The role of HSP70 in the chemotherapeutic approach for proteasomal degradation and autophagy Erdi Sozen1, Perinur Bozaykut1, Nesrin Kartal Ozer1, Tilman Grune2, Betul Karademir1 1 Dept. of Biochem., Med. Fac. / Gen. Met. Dis. Res. Invest. Cent., Marmara Uni., Istanbul, Turkey, 2Dept. of Nutr. Toxic., Inst. of Nutr., Friedrich Schiller Univ., Jena, Germany Mar. 26 (Wed) O53 Overexpression of multidrug transporters ABCB1 and ABCG2 confers increased sensitivity to oxidative stress Damian Krzyzanowski, Grzegorz Bartosz, Agnieszka M. Grzelak Dept. of Mol. Biophys., Univ. of Lodz, Poland O54 Mitochondrial transfer from stromal cells to tumour cells depleted of their mitochondrial DNA restores respiration and tumour-initiating capacity Jiri Neuzil1, An Tan3, James Baty3, Berwini Endaya1, Ayanachew Bezawork-Geleta1, Martina Bajzikova2, Bing Yan1, Jacob Goodwin1, Elham Alizadeh1, Martin Peterka2, Lan-Feng Dong1, Mike Berridge3 1 Malaghan Inst., Victoria Univ., Wellington, New Zealand, 2Inst. of Biotechnol., Academy of Sci., Prague, Czech Republic, 3 Malaghan Inst., Victoria Univ., Wellington, New Zealand SFRRI 2014 55 Scientific Program Room B2 Symposium 19: New Insights and Current Concepts of Aging 9:40-11:40 Chairs: Yuji Ikeno, USA Warren Ladiges, USA Sponsored by Japanese Society of Anti-Aging Medicine S19-1 Role of oxidative stress and redox regulation on cognitive function Ting-Ting Huang1,2, David Leu1, Yani Zou1, Rikki Corniola1, John R Fike3 1 Dept. of Neurol. and Neurological Sci., Stanford Univ. Sch. of Med., USA, 2Geriatric Res., Edu., and Care Cent., VA Palo Alto Health Care Sys., 3Dept. of Neurosurgery and Radiation Oncol. S19-2 Mitochondrial ROS and energetics play a central role in interventions that enhance cardiac health and aging Peter S Rabinovitch1, Dao-Fu Dai1, Ying A Chiao1, Pabalu P Karunadharma1, Nathan B Basisty1, Edward J Hsieh2, Hazel H Szeto3, Michael J MacCoss2 1 Dept. of Pathol., Univ. of Washington, USA, 2Dept. of Genome Sci., Univ. of Washington, Seattle, USA, 3Dept. of Pharmacol., Weill Cornell Med. Coll., New York, USA S19-3 Exercise delays age-related cancer driven by tissue hypoxia and mitochondrial ROS Warren Ladiges Dept. of Comparative Med., Sch. of Med., Univ. of Washington, USA S19-4 Mechanisms that extend lifespan in Sprague-Dawley rats overexpressing Cu/ZnSOD Yuji Ikeno Barshop Inst., UTHSCSA, USA Break 11:40-11:50 Meet the Professor 9 11:50-12:50 Chair: Giovanni E. Mann, UK Sponsored by Daiichi Sankyo Co., Ltd. MP9 Cyclophilin A: A novel biomarker for oxidative stress and cardiovascular diseases Kimio Satoh, Hiroaki Shimokawa Dept. of Cardiovascular Med., Tohoku Univ. Grad. Sch. of Med., Sendai, Japan Break 56 SFRRI 2014 12:50-13:00 Symposium 20: New Aspect of Antioxidative Therapy 13:00-15:00 Chairs: Yukio Nagasaki, Japan Aki Hirayama, Japan S20-1 Novel redox polymer therapeutics for antioxidative injuries Yukio Nagasaki1,2,3 1 Dept. of Mater. Sci., Univ. of Tsukuba, Japan, 2Dept. of Med. Sci., Univ. of Tsukuba, 3Satellite Lab. at Univ. of Tsukuba, WPI-MANA, NIMS S20-2 Cell-mediated delivery of redox enzymes for treatment of neurodegenerative disorders Elena V. Batrakova1, Matthew J. Haney1, Yuling Zhao1, Emily B. Harrison2, Vivek Mahajan1,3, Shaheen Ahmed2, Zhijian He1, Shawn D. Hingtgen4, Natalia L. Klyachko1,5, R. Lee Mosley3, Howard E. Gendelman3, Alexander V. Kabanov1,5 1 Eshelman Sch. of Pharm., Univ. of North Carolina, USA, 2Dept. of Pharm. Sci., Cent. for Drug Delivery and Nanomed., Univ. of Nebraska Med. Cent., 3Dept. of Pharmacol. and Experimental Neurosci., Cent. for Neurodegenerative Disorders, Univ. of Nebraska Med. Cent., 4Eshelman Sch. of Pharm., Univ. of North Carolina, 5Dept. of Chem. Enzymol., Fac. of Chem., M.V. Lomonosov Moscow State Univ., Moscow, Russia S20-3 Metabolites of lycopene and prostate cancer risk John W Erdman, Jr.1, Josh W Smith1, Nancy E Moran2, Steven K Clinton2 1 Dept. of Food Sci. and Human Nutr., Univ. of Illinois, USA, 2Dept. of Internal Med., The Ohio State Univ. S20-4 Oxidative metabolism of dietary xanthophylls and their implications for bioavailability and function Akihiko Nagao Natl. Food Res. Inst., NARO, Japan 15:00-15:20 Oral 14: Macromolecle Modification 15:20-16:08 Mar. 26 (Wed) Coffee Break Chairs: Susumu Takekoshi, Japan Daniel Kim-Shapiro, USA O55 The inflammation-associated oxidant peroxynitrous acid modifies the extracellular matrix generated by human coronary artery endothelial cells Christine Y Chuang1,2, Georg Degendorfer1,2, Astrid Hammer3, John M Whitelock4, Ernst Malle5, Michael J Davies1,2 1 The Heart Res. Inst., Australia, 2Fac. of Med., Univ. of Sydney, Australia, 3Inst. of Cell Biol., Histol. and Embryol., Med. Univ. of Graz, Austria, 4Grad. Sch. of Biomed. Eng., Univ. of New South Wales, Australia, 5Inst. of Mol. Biol. and Biochem., Med. Univ. of Graz, Austria O56 Myeloperoxidase-derived oxidants disrupt the iron-sulfur cluster of aconitase of human coronary artery endothelial cells Jihan Talib, Naomi L Cook, Michael J Davies The Heart Res. Inst., Australia SFRRI 2014 57 Scientific Program O57 Peroxynitrous acid induces structural and functional modification of extracellular matrix and its key component, laminin Georg Degendorfer1,2, Christine Y. Chuang1, Ernst Malle3, Michael J. Davies1,2 1 The Heart Res. Inst., Newtown, Australia, 2Fac. of Med., The Univ. of Sydney, Australia, 3The Inst. of Mol. Biol. and Biochem., Med. Univ. of Graz, Austria Oral 15: Inflammation, Infection, Immunity 16:08-16:56 Chairs: Simone Fulda, Germany Junji Terao, Japan O58 Role of chlorinated nucleosides produced by hypochlorous acid in the perturbation of cellular function under inflammatory conditions Jessica Macer-Wright1,2, Naomi Stanley1,2, Joanne Tan1,2, Christina Bursill1,2, Clare L. Hawkins1,2 1 Heart Res. Inst., Newtown, Australia, 2Fac. of Med., Univ. of Sydney, Australia O59 Carbon monoxide releasing molecule-3 (CORM3) suppresses human cerebrovascular endothelial cell pro-adhesive phenotype by inhibiting JNK/AP-1 signaling Fukashi Serizawa1,2, Eric K. Patterson2, Richard F Potter2,3, Douglas D Fraser2, Gediminas Cepinskas2,3 1 Dept. of Transplant., Reconstruct. and Endoscopic Surg., Tohoku Univ. Hosp., Japan, 2Cent. for Critical Illness Res., Lawson Health Res. Inst., London, Ontario, Canada, 3Dept. of Med. Biophys., Western Univ., London, Ontario, Canada O60 The ischemia-reperfusion injury in the skeletal muscle is diminished by the systemic application of CO-Releasing Molecule (CORM-3) Aurelia Bihari1,3,4, Gediminas Cepinskas1, Thomas L Forbes2,4, Richard F Potter1, Abdel-Rahman Lawendy1,3,4 1 Cent. for Critical Illness Res., Lawson Health Res. Inst., Canada, 2Vascular Surg., London Health Sci. Cent., London, Canada, 3Orthopaedic Surg., London Health Sci. Cent., London, Canada,4Surg., Univ. of Western Ontario, London, Canada O61 Glutathione peroxidase 2 interferes with NF-B signaling Anna P. Kipp, Manuel Modraeger, Mike F. Mueller, Regina Brigelius-Flohe Dept. Biochem. of Micronutrients, German Inst. of Human Nutr. Potsdam-Rehbruecke, Germany 58 SFRRI 2014 Room K Author Workshop: How to write a great research paper, and get it accepted by a good journal 13:00-15:00 Chair: Shinya Toyokuni, Japan Sponsored by Elsevier AW How to write a great research paper, and get it accepted by a good journal Anthony Newman Life Sci. Dept., Elsevier, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Coffee Break 15:00-15:20 Oral 16: Cardiovascular 2 15:20-16:08 Chairs: Christian Schoneich, USA Philip Eaton, UK O62 Characterization of redox modifications in cardiac DJ-1 during oxidative stress and its interaction with peroxiredoxin Mariana Fernandez-Caggiano, Ewald Schroder, Joseph Burgoyne, Philip Eaton Cardiovascular Div. King’s Coll. London, UK O63 Regulation of arterial remodeling through interaction of Sequestosome1/p62 with redox-sensitive Kv channels Tetsuro Ishii1,2, Eiji Warabi1, Richard C. Siow2, Giovanni E Mann2 1 Univ. of Tsukuba, Japa