Lack of XPC leads to a shift between respiratory complexes I and II but sensitizes cells to mitochondrial stress

Genomic instability drives tumorigenesis and DNA repair defects are associated with elevated cancer. Metabolic alterations are also observed during tumorigenesis, although a causal relationship between these has not been clearly established. Xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) is a DNA repair disease charact...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2017-03, Vol.7 (1), p.155-155, Article 155
Hauptverfasser: Mori, Mateus P., Costa, Rute A. P., Soltys, Daniela T., Freire, Thiago de S., Rossato, Franco A., Amigo, Ignácio, Kowaltowski, Alicia J., Vercesi, Aníbal E., de Souza-Pinto, Nadja C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Genomic instability drives tumorigenesis and DNA repair defects are associated with elevated cancer. Metabolic alterations are also observed during tumorigenesis, although a causal relationship between these has not been clearly established. Xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) is a DNA repair disease characterized by early cancer. Cells with reduced expression of the XPC protein display a metabolic shift from OXPHOS to glycolysis, which was linked to accumulation of nuclear DNA damage and oxidants generation via NOX-1. Using XP-C cells, we show that mitochondrial respiratory complex I (CI) is impaired in the absence of XPC, while complex II (CII) is upregulated in XP-C cells. The CI/CII metabolic shift was dependent on XPC, as XPC complementation reverted the phenotype. We demonstrate that mitochondria are the primary source of H 2 O 2 and glutathione peroxidase activity is compromised. Moreover, mtDNA is irreversibly damaged and accumulates deletions. XP-C cells were more sensitive to the mitochondrial inhibitor antimycin A, an effect also prevented in XPC-corrected cells. Our results show that XPC deficiency leads to alterations in mitochondrial redox balance with a CI/CII shift as a possible adaptation to lower CI activity, but at the cost of sensitizing XP-C cells to mitochondrial oxidative stress.
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-017-00130-x