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Publication : Mitohormesis in Mice via Sustained Basal Activation of Mitochondrial and Antioxidant Signaling.

First Author  Cox CS Year  2018
Journal  Cell Metab Volume  28
Issue  5 Pages  776-786.e5
PubMed ID  30122556 Mgi Jnum  J:267914
Mgi Id  MGI:6268553 Doi  10.1016/j.cmet.2018.07.011
Citation  Cox CS, et al. (2018) Mitohormesis in Mice via Sustained Basal Activation of Mitochondrial and Antioxidant Signaling. Cell Metab 28(5):776-786.e5
abstractText  Transient mitochondrial stress can promote beneficial physiological responses and longevity, termed "mitohormesis." To interrogate mitohormetic pathways in mammals, we generated mice in which mitochondrial superoxide dismutase 2 (SOD2) can be knocked down in an inducible and reversible manner (iSOD2-KD mice). Depleting SOD2 only during embryonic development did not cause post-natal lethality, allowing us to probe adaptive responses to mitochondrial oxidant stress in adult mice. Liver from adapted mice had increased mitochondrial biogenesis and antioxidant gene expression and fewer reactive oxygen species. Gene expression analysis implicated non-canonical activation of the Nrf2 antioxidant and PPARgamma/PGC-1alpha mitochondrial signaling pathways in this response. Transient SOD2 knockdown in embryonic fibroblasts from iSOD2-KD mice also resulted in adaptive mitochondrial changes, enhanced antioxidant capacity, and resistance to a subsequent oxidant challenge. We propose that mitohormesis in response to mitochondrial oxidative stress in mice involves sustained activation of mitochondrial and antioxidant signaling pathways to establish a heightened basal antioxidant state.
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