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Hypoxia decreases ROS level in human fibroblasts
- Source :
- The international journal of biochemistrycell biology. 88
- Publication Year :
- 2016
-
Abstract
- We have previously demonstrated that cells adapt to hypoxia using different metabolic reprogramming mechanisms depending on metabolism. We now investigate how the different adapting mechanisms affect reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels, and how ROS levels and cellular metabolism are linked. We show that when skin fibroblasts grew under short-term hypoxia (1% oxygen tension) ROS level markedly decreased (-50%) whatever substrate was available to the cells. Indeed, cellular ROS level linearly and directly decreased with oxygen tension. However, these relationships cannot explain the progressive ROS level decrease observed after prolonged cells hypoxia exposure. In glucose-enriched medium reduced mitochondrial mass and greater fragmentation are observed, both clear-cut indications of mitophagy suggesting that this is responsible for cellular ROS level decrease. Otherwise, in glucose-free medium exposure to prolonged hypoxia resulted in only minor mass reduction, but significantly enhanced expression of antioxidant enzymes. Interestingly, cellular ROS levels were lower in glucose-free compared to glucose-enriched medium under either normoxic or hypoxic conditions. Taken together, these findings reveal that in primary human fibroblasts hypoxia induces a decline in ROS and that different metabolism-dependent mechanisms contribute it, besides the major oxygen concentration decrease. In addition, the present data support the notion that metabolisms generating fewer ROS are associated with lower HIF-1α stabilization.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Adult
Adolescent
HIF-1α
Oxidative phosphorylation
Mitochondrion
Biology
Biochemistry
Antioxidants
Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic
03 medical and health sciences
Young Adult
0302 clinical medicine
Mitophagy
medicine
Humans
Fragmentation (cell biology)
Child
Membrane potential
Cell Proliferation
Skin
chemistry.chemical_classification
Membrane Potential, Mitochondrial
Reactive oxygen species
Antioxidant enzyme
Cell Biology
Metabolism
Hypoxia (medical)
Fibroblasts
Glutathione
Cell Hypoxia
Mitochondria
Oxygen tension
Cell biology
030104 developmental biology
chemistry
030220 oncology & carcinogenesis
Reactive oxygen specie
medicine.symptom
Energy Metabolism
Reactive Oxygen Species
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18785875
- Volume :
- 88
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The international journal of biochemistrycell biology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d472c276ff035e372cdc30dfc2a810a2