학술논문

Oxygen toxicity causes cyclic damage by destabilizing specific Fe-S cluster-containing protein complexes.
Document Type
article
Source
Molecular Cell. 83(6)
Subject
DNA damage
Fe-S clusters
hyperoxia
lung injury
mitochondria
oxygen
purine synthesis
redox
translation fidelity
Animals
Humans
Mice
Electron Transport Complex I
Hyperoxia
Lung
Mitochondria
Mitochondrial Diseases
Oxygen
Language
Abstract
Oxygen is toxic across all three domains of life. Yet, the underlying molecular mechanisms remain largely unknown. Here, we systematically investigate the major cellular pathways affected by excess molecular oxygen. We find that hyperoxia destabilizes a specific subset of Fe-S cluster (ISC)-containing proteins, resulting in impaired diphthamide synthesis, purine metabolism, nucleotide excision repair, and electron transport chain (ETC) function. Our findings translate to primary human lung cells and a mouse model of pulmonary oxygen toxicity. We demonstrate that the ETC is the most vulnerable to damage, resulting in decreased mitochondrial oxygen consumption. This leads to further tissue hyperoxia and cyclic damage of the additional ISC-containing pathways. In support of this model, primary ETC dysfunction in the Ndufs4 KO mouse model causes lung tissue hyperoxia and dramatically increases sensitivity to hyperoxia-mediated ISC damage. This work has important implications for hyperoxia pathologies, including bronchopulmonary dysplasia, ischemia-reperfusion injury, aging, and mitochondrial disorders.