Siddiq Ambreena, Aminova Leila R, Troy Carol M, Suh Kyungsun, Messer Zachary, Semenza Gregg L, Ratan Rajiv R
Department of Neurosciences, Burke Medical Research Institute, White Plains, New York 10605, USA.
J Neurosci. 2009 Jul 8;29(27):8828-38. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1779-09.2009.
Oxidative stress contributes to tissue injury in conditions ranging from cardiovascular disease to stroke, spinal cord injury, neurodegeneration, and perhaps even aging. Yet the efficacy of antioxidants in human disease has been mixed at best. We need a better understanding of the mechanisms by which established antioxidants combat oxidative stress. Iron chelators are well established inhibitors of oxidative death in both neural and non-neural tissues, but their precise mechanism of action remains elusive. The prevailing but not completely substantiated view is that iron chelators prevent oxidative injury by suppressing Fenton chemistry and the formation of highly reactive hydroxyl radicals. Here, we show that iron chelation protects, rather unexpectedly, by inhibiting the hypoxia-inducible factor prolyl 4-hydroxylase isoform 1 (PHD1), an iron and 2-oxoglutarate-dependent dioxygenase. PHD1 and its isoforms 2 and 3 are best known for stabilizing transcriptional regulators involved in hypoxic adaptation, such as HIF-1alpha and cAMP response element-binding protein (CREB). Yet we find that global hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-PHD inhibition protects neurons even when HIF-1alpha and CREB are directly suppressed. Moreover, two global HIF-PHD inhibitors continued to be neuroprotective even in the presence of diminished HIF-2alpha levels, which itself increases neuronal susceptibility to oxidative stress. Finally, RNA interference to PHD1 but not isoforms PHD2 or PHD3 prevents oxidative death, independent of HIF activation. Together, these studies suggest that iron chelators can prevent normoxic oxidative neuronal death through selective inhibition of PHD1 but independent of HIF-1alpha and CREB; and that HIF-2alpha, not HIF-1alpha, regulates susceptibility to normoxic oxidative neuronal death.
氧化应激在从心血管疾病到中风、脊髓损伤、神经退行性变乃至衰老等各种病症中都会导致组织损伤。然而,抗氧化剂在人类疾病中的疗效充其量也只是参差不齐。我们需要更好地理解现有抗氧化剂对抗氧化应激的机制。铁螯合剂是神经组织和非神经组织中公认的氧化死亡抑制剂,但其确切作用机制仍不清楚。目前流行但尚未完全得到证实的观点是,铁螯合剂通过抑制芬顿化学反应和高活性羟基自由基的形成来预防氧化损伤。在此,我们表明,铁螯合通过抑制缺氧诱导因子脯氨酰4-羟化酶同工型1(PHD1)来保护细胞,这相当出人意料,PHD1是一种依赖铁和2-氧代戊二酸的双加氧酶。PHD1及其同工型2和3最为人所知的是稳定参与缺氧适应的转录调节因子,如HIF-1α和cAMP反应元件结合蛋白(CREB)。然而,我们发现,即使HIF-1α和CREB被直接抑制,全局缺氧诱导因子(HIF)-PHD抑制仍能保护神经元。此外,即使在HIF-2α水平降低的情况下,两种全局HIF-PHD抑制剂仍具有神经保护作用,而HIF-2α本身会增加神经元对氧化应激的敏感性。最后,RNA干扰PHD1而非PHD2或PHD3同工型可预防氧化死亡,且与HIF激活无关。总之,这些研究表明,铁螯合剂可通过选择性抑制PHD1但独立于HIF-1α和CREB来预防常氧氧化神经元死亡;并且调节常氧氧化神经元死亡易感性的是HIF-2α而非HIF-1α。