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Publication : Resistance to hyperoxia with heme oxygenase-1 disruption: role of iron.

First Author  Dennery PA Year  2003
Journal  Free Radic Biol Med Volume  34
Issue  1 Pages  124-33
PubMed ID  12498987 Mgi Jnum  J:118007
Mgi Id  MGI:3698347 Doi  10.1016/s0891-5849(02)01295-9
Citation  Dennery PA, et al. (2003) Resistance to hyperoxia with heme oxygenase-1 disruption: role of iron. Free Radic Biol Med 34(1):124-33
abstractText  In many models, a protective role for heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1), the rate-limiting enzyme in heme degradation, has been demonstrated. Also, HO-1 null mice (KO) are more susceptible to inflammation and hypoxia and transplant rejection. Nonetheless, their response to hyperoxia (> 95% O(2)) has not yet been evaluated. Surprisingly, after acute hyperoxic exposure, KO had significantly decreased markers of lung oxidative injury and survived chronic hyperoxia as well as wild-type (WT) controls. Disrupted HO-1 expression was associated with decreased lung reactive iron and iron-associated proteins, decreased NADPH cytochrome cp450 reductase activity, and decreased lung peroxidase activity compared to WT. Injection of tin protoporphyrin, an inhibitor of HO, in the WT decreased acute hyperoxic lung injury, whereas transduction of human HO-1 in the KO reversed the relative protection of the KO to acute injury and worsened hyperoxic survival. This suggests that disruption of HO-1 protects against hyperoxia by diminishing the generation of toxic reactive intermediates in the lung via iron and H(2)O(2).
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