Exposure of Yeast Cells to Anoxia Induces Transient Oxidative Stress
The mitochondrial respiratory chain is required for the induction of some yeast hypoxic nuclear genes. Because the respiratory chain produces reactive oxygen species (ROS), which can mediate intracellular signal cascades, we addressed the possibility that ROS are involved in hypoxic gene induction....
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of biological chemistry 2002-09, Vol.277 (38), p.34773-34784 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The mitochondrial respiratory chain is required for the induction of some yeast hypoxic nuclear genes. Because the respiratory
chain produces reactive oxygen species (ROS), which can mediate intracellular signal cascades, we addressed the possibility
that ROS are involved in hypoxic gene induction. Recent studies with mammalian cells have produced conflicting results concerning
this question. These studies have relied almost exclusively on fluorescent dyes to measure ROS levels. Insofar as ROS are
very reactive and inherently unstable, a more reliable method for measuring changes in their intracellular levels is to measure
their damage ( e.g. the accumulation of 8-hydroxy-2â²-deoxyguanosine (8-OH-dG) in DNA, and oxidative protein carbonylation) or to measure the
expression of an oxidative stress-induced gene, e.g. SOD1 . Here we used these approaches as well as a fluorescent dye, carboxy-H 2 -dichloro-dihydrofluorescein diacetate (carboxy-H 2 -DCFDA), to determine whether ROS levels change in yeast cells exposed to anoxia. These studies reveal that the level of mitochondrial
and cytosolic protein carbonylation, the level of 8-OH-dG in mitochondrial and nuclear DNA, and the expression of SOD1 all increase transiently during a shift to anoxia. These studies also reveal that carboxy-H 2 -DCFDA is an unreliable reporter of ROS levels in yeast cells shifted to anoxia. By using two-dimensional electrophoresis
and mass spectrometry (matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight), we have found that specific proteins become
carbonylated during a shift to anoxia and that some of these proteins are the same proteins that become carbonylated during
peroxidative stress. The mitochondrial respiratory chain is responsible for much of this carbonylation. Together, these findings
indicate that yeast cells exposed to anoxia experience transient oxidative stress and raise the possibility that this initiates
the induction of hypoxic genes. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9258 1083-351X |
DOI: | 10.1074/jbc.M203902200 |