👤 Barry Halliwell

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Also published as: B. Halliwell,
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C. Crivelli, S. Garcia-Madrona, M. Gil-Minguez +428 more · 2024 · Frontiers in Neuroscience · Frontiers · added 2026-04-20
C. Crivelli, S. Garcia-Madrona, M. Gil-Minguez, R. Lujan, A. Almeida, S. Moncada, J. P. Bolanos, C. Angebault, J. Fauconnier, S. Patergnani, J. Rieusset, A. Danese, C. A. Affortit, A. Ardalan, S. Sowlati-Hashjin, H. Oduwoye, S. O. Uwumarenogie, M. Karttunen, M. D. Smith, A. Atlante, G. Amadoro, V. Latina, D. Valenti, M. Belanger, I. Allaman, P. J. Magistretti, K. F. Bell, B. Al-Mubarak, J. H. Fowler, P. S. Baxter, K. Gupta, T. Tsujita, A. M. Bertholet, A. M. Natale, P. Bisignano, J. Suzuki, A. Fedorenko, J. Hamilton, C. Bienboire-Frosini, D. Wang, M. Marcet-Rius, D. Villanueva-Garcia, A. Gazzano, A. Dominguez-Oliva, M. Bienengraeber, K. S. Echtay, M. Klingenberg, C. Bionda, J. Portoukalian, D. Schmitt, C. Rodriguez-Lafrasse, D. Ardail, M. Bozluolcay, G. Andican, S. Firtina, G. Erkol, D. Konukoglu, R. D. Burgoyne, D. A. Butterfield, B. Halliwell, M. Cater, S. M. Holter, K. A. Chamberlain, N. Huang, Y. Xie, F. LiCausi, S. Li, Y. Li, S. L. Chan, D. Liu, G. A. Kyriazis, P. Bagsiyao, X. Ouyang, M. P. Mattson, W. Chen, J. Yang, S. Chen, H. Xiang, H. Liu, D. Lin, Z. Chen, C. Zhong, I. Cho, G. J. Hwang, J. H. Cho, H. O. Song, H. E. Ji, S. Yang, A. C. Chu, P. W. Ho, K. H. Kwok, J. W. Ho, K. H. Chan, H. F. Liu, E. H. Corder, A. M. Saunders, W. J. Strittmatter, D. E. Schmechel, P. C. Gaskell, G. W. Small, S. M. Crivelli, Z. Quadri, H. J. Vekaria, Z. Zhu, P. Tripathi, A. Elsherbini, J. Cummings, Y. Zhou, G. Lee, K. Zhong, J. Fonseca, F. Cheng, C. H. Davis, K. Y. Kim, E. A. Bushong, E. A. Mills, D. Boassa, T. Shih, S. M. de la Monte, J. R. Wands, L. E. de Vries, A. Jongejan, J. Monteiro Fortes, R. Balesar, A. J. M. Rozemuller, P. D. Moerland, G. A. Dienel, D. L. Rothman, R. Domingues, C. Pereira, M. T. Cruz, A. Silva, R. Dringen, J. M. Gutterer, J. Hirrlinger, H. H. Hoepken, T. Minich, C. Ruedig, A. Lajtha, G. E. Gibson, R. H. Du, F. F. Wu, M. Lu, X. D. Shu, J. H. Ding, G. Wu, E. Winkler, J. Fortea, J. Pegueroles, D. Alcolea, O. Belbin, O. Dols-Icardo, L. Vaque-Alcazar, P. Garcia-Nogales, K. D. Garlid, M. Jaburek, P. Jezek, D. E. Orosz, M. Modriansky, S. Vassanelli, K. N. Green, H. Khashwji, T. Estrada, F. M. LaFerla, J. Grundlingh, P. I. Dargan, M. El-Zanfaly, D. M. Wood, A. Gustavsson, N. Norton, T. Fast, L. Frolich, J. Georges, D. Holzapfel, J. N. Guzman, J. Sanchez-Padilla, D. Wokosin, J. Kondapalli, E. Ilijic, P. T. Schumacker, A. Habas, J. Hahn, X. Wang, M. Margeta, P. Hanak, K. Hayakawa, E. Esposito, Y. Terasaki, Y. Liu, C. Xing, A. Herrero-Mendez, E. Fernandez, C. Maestre, D. H. So, Z. H. Tse, H. M. Tse, D. C. Yiu, W. Y. Zhang, T. Hoang, M. Kuljanin, M. Jelokhani-Niaraki, K. A. Hogan, C. C. S. Chini, E. N. Chini, N. Hu, Y. Fu, W. F. Li, X. R. Yang, M. Cao, F. F. Li, S. G. Huang, M. O. Isei, M. Crockett, E. Chen, J. Rodwell-Bullock, T. Caroll, P. A. Girardi, M. V. Ivanova, F. R. McSorley, G. Krnac, H. T. Jacobs, D. Jiang, H. Lu, D. Jimenez-Blasco, P. Santofimia-Castano, A. Gonzalez, Y. Jing, Y. Niu, C. Liu, K. Zen, D. Li, J. M. Johnson, A. D. Peterlin, E. Balderas, E. G. Sustarsic, J. A. Maschek, M. J. Lang, S. M. Joksimovic, P. Eggan, Y. Izumi, S. L. Joksimovic, V. Tesic, R. M. Dietz, S. M. Ghodsi, J. A. Heinsbroek, J. E. Orfila, N. Busquet, B. Kaltschmidt, M. Uherek, B. Volk, P. A. Baeuerle, C. Kaltschmidt, Y. Kang, L. Chen, D. Kapogiannis, K. I. Avgerinos, B. M. Kenwood, J. L. Weaver, A. Bajwa, I. K. Poon, F. L. Byrne, B. A. Murrow, E. Klotzsch, A. Smorodchenko, L. Lofler, R. Moldzio, E. Parkinson, G. J. Schutz, N. Kyrtata, H. C. A. Emsley, O. Sparasci, L. M. Parkes, B. R. Dickie, Y. Lee, B. M. Morrison, S. Lengacher, M. H. Farah, P. N. Hoffman, S. A. Liddelow, K. A. Guttenplan, L. E. Clarke, F. C. Bennett, C. J. Bohlen, L. Schirmer, N. C. de Souza-Pinto, J. R. Slevin, R. P. Wersto, M. Zhan, J. Y. Chatton, M. Manczak, M. J. Calkins, P. H. Reddy, W. Mao, X. X. Yu, A. Zhong, W. Li, J. Brush, S. W. Sherwood, A. Montesanto, P. Crocco, M. Anfossi, N. Smirne, G. Puccio, R. Colao, S. Moriguchi, N. Shioda, Y. Yamamoto, H. Tagashira, K. Fukunaga, H. Morton, S. Kshirsagar, E. Orlov, L. E. Bunquin, N. Sawant, L. Boleng, L. Mosconi, R. D. Andrews, D. C. Matthews, T. Y. Nakamura, S. Nakao, S. Wakabayashi, K. F. Neumann, L. Rojo, L. P. Navarrete, G. Farias, P. Reyes, R. B. Maccioni, D. G. Nicholls, S. Oddo, A. Caccamo, J. D. Shepherd, M. P. Murphy, T. E. Golde, R. Kayed, D. M. A. Oliver, W. R. Pearson, L. Pellerin, A. K. Bouzier-Sore, A. Aubert, S. Serres, M. Merle, R. Costalat, H. Perreten Lambert, M. Zenger, G. Azarias, R. J. Perry, D. Zhang, X. M. Zhang, J. L. Boyer, G. I. Shulman, C. Petersen, M. D. Nielsen, E. S. Andersen, A. L. Basse, M. S. Isidor, L. K. Markussen, T. Philips, J. D. Rothstein, C. Poetschke, J. Duda, J. Benkert, E. Dragicevic, T. P. Snutch, J. Striessnig, J. A. Pradeepkiran, R. A. Rice, N. C. Berchtold, C. W. Cotman, N. Rosenberg, M. Reva, F. Binda, L. Restivo, P. Depierre, J. Puyal, J. J. Ruprecht, E. R. S. Kunji, A. S. Saab, I. D. Tzvetanova, K. A. Nave, I. D. Tzvetavona, A. Trevisiol, S. Baltan, P. Dibaj, K. Kusch, A. Serrano-Pozo, Z. Li, A. Noori, H. N. Nguyen, A. Mezlini, L. Li, M. Sheridan, B. Ogretmen, C. Simons, N. Deuter, O. Pongs, T. Schneider, A. Rupprecht, I. Sarilova, O. Ninnemann, A. U. Brauer, K. Franke, G. E. Stutzmann, I. Smith, I. Parker, R. H. Swerdlow, R. Thangavel, D. Kempuraj, S. Zaheer, S. Raikwar, M. E. Ahmed, G. P. Selvakumar, B. Vaccari-Cardoso, M. Antipina, A. G. Teschemacher, S. Kasparov, B. R. Villa, A. G. George, T. E. Shutt, P. G. Sullivan, J. M. Rho, G. C. Teskey, A. A. Willette, B. B. Bendlin, E. J. Starks, A. C. Birdsill, S. C. Johnson, B. T. Christian, S. Q. Xu, X. D. Yang, Y. W. Qian, Q. Xiao Show less
The brain’s high demand for energy necessitates tightly regulated metabolic pathways to sustain physiological activity. Glucose, the primary energy substrate, undergoes complex metabolic transformatio Show more
The brain’s high demand for energy necessitates tightly regulated metabolic pathways to sustain physiological activity. Glucose, the primary energy substrate, undergoes complex metabolic transformations, with mitochondria playing a central role in ATP production via oxidative phosphorylation. Dysregulation of this metabolic interplay is implicated in Alzheimer’s disease (AD), where compromised glucose metabolism, oxidative stress, and mitochondrial dysfunction contribute to disease progression. This review explores the intricate bioenergetic crosstalk between astrocytes and neurons, highlighting the function of mitochondrial uncoupling proteins (UCPs), particularly UCP4, as important regulators of brain metabolism and neuronal function. Predominantly expressed in the brain, UCP4 reduces the membrane potential in the inner mitochondrial membrane, thereby potentially decreasing the generation of reactive oxygen species. Furthermore, UCP4 mitigates mitochondrial calcium overload and sustains cellular ATP levels through a metabolic shift from mitochondrial respiration to glycolysis. Interestingly, the levels of the neuronal UCPs, UCP2, 4 and 5 are significantly reduced in AD brain tissue and a specific UCP4 variant has been associated to an increased risk of developing AD. Few studies modulating the expression of UCP4 in astrocytes or neurons have highlighted protective effects against neurodegeneration and aging, suggesting that pharmacological strategies aimed at activating UCPs, such as protonophoric uncouplers, hold promise for therapeutic interventions in AD and other neurodegenerative diseases. Despite significant advances, our understanding of UCPs in brain metabolism remains in its early stages, emphasizing the need for further research to unravel their biological functions in the brain and their therapeutic potential. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2024.1483708
ROS amino-acid mitochondria review
Barry Halliwell · 2022 · Biochemical and biophysical research communications · Elsevier · added 2026-04-20
The field of oxygen free radicals, antioxidants and reactive oxygen species (ROS) has exploded in the past few decades, and BBRC has published several seminal papers. ROS can cause oxidative damage, b Show more
The field of oxygen free radicals, antioxidants and reactive oxygen species (ROS) has exploded in the past few decades, and BBRC has published several seminal papers. ROS can cause oxidative damage, but also play fundamental roles in living organisms, in such processes as signal transduction and defence against pathogens. ROS underpin every aspect of human biology. Indeed, an endless stream of published papers refers to the biological roles of "ROS". Sadly, much of this work is mechanistically meaningless. To make progress, the detailed molecular mechanisms of action of ROS must be elucidated and appropriate methodology must be used to measure them and the oxidative damage that they can cause, as emphasized in a recent review by Murphy et al. Attention must also switch from clinical studies involving administration of high-dose supplements of vitamins E, C and β-carotene for the treatment or prevention of human disease into other promising diet-derived cytoprotective agents. One of them may be ergothioneine. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.bbrc.2022.08.098
ROS review