4.2 Article

Gene Expression Profiling Identifies a Role for CHOP During Inhibition of the Mitochondrial Respiratory Chain

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 146, Issue 1, Pages 123-132

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/jb/mvp052

Keywords

C; EBP beta; CHOP-10; DNA microarray; mitochondrial stress; respiratory chain

Funding

  1. Ministry for Education, Science, Sports and Culture of Japan
  2. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT)

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Mitochondrial dysfunction, in particular, interference in the respiratory chain, is often responsible for the toxicogenic effects of xenobiotics. In this study, changes in gene expression resulting from pharmacological inhibition of the respiratory chain were studied by DNA microarray analysis using cells treated with rotenone or antimycin A, which inhibit complexes I and III of the electron transport system, respectively. Forty-eight genes were either up- or down-regulated more than 3-fold. These included stress- and/or metabolic-related effector genes and several transcriptional regulators represented by CHOP-10. Further study using siRNA showed that among the four genes studied, up-regulation of three was dependent on CHOP-10. C/EBP beta, a dimerizing partner of CHOP-10, was also involved in two of the three genes including Trib3, implying that CHOP-10, heterodimerizing with C/EBP beta or another partner played a key role in the expression of a set of genes under stress. Although CHOP-10 and Trib3 were both ER-stress response genes, signal inducing Trib3 during mitochondrial stress was distinct from that during ER stress. Cytotoxicity caused by inhibition of the respiratory chain was attenuated by treatment with siRNA for CHOP-10. This study demonstrated the importance of CHOP-10 in coordinating individual gene expression in response to the mitochondrial stress.

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