Literature DB >> 12169577

Elevated expression of hexokinase II protects human lung epithelial-like A549 cells against oxidative injury.

Aftab Ahmad1, Shama Ahmad, B Kelly Schneider, Corrie B Allen, Ling-Yi Chang, Carl W White.   

Abstract

Increased glucose utilization and hexokinase (HK)-II expression are adaptive features of lung cells exposed to hypoxia or hyperoxia. HK-II is the most regulated isoform of HK. Whether its overexpression could be protective against oxidative stress was explored in human lung epithelial-like (A549) cells. HK-II was overexpressed in A549 cells in a tetracycline-repressible retroviral vector system. Elevated expression of HK-II was confirmed by Western blot and activity measurements. Cell death caused by exposure to hyperoxia was decreased in HK-II-overexpressing cells. This effect was reversed when HK-II expression was suppressed with doxycycline. A similar protective effect was observed in HK-II-overexpressing cells after treatment with 1 mM hydrogen peroxide for 48 h. At baseline, fluorescence microscopy showed that overexpressed HK-II was localized to mitochondria. Electron microscopic studies showed that hyperoxia-exposed HK-II overexpressors had better-preserved and quantitatively smaller mitochondria than those in which the HK-II expression was suppressed or in the nontransduced A549 cells. Mitochondrial membrane potential was increased in HK-II-overexpressing cells exposed to hyperoxia compared with the nontransduced control cells under similar conditions. The present study demonstrates that HK-II protects human lung epithelial-like A549 cells against oxidative insults by protecting the mitochondria.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12169577     DOI: 10.1152/ajplung.00410.2001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Lung Cell Mol Physiol        ISSN: 1040-0605            Impact factor:   5.464


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