4.7 Article

Mitochondrial dysfunction in mouse livers depleted of iron chaperone PCBP1

Journal

FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 175, Issue -, Pages 18-27

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2021.08.232

Keywords

PCBP1; Steatosis; NASH; NAFLD; Oxidative stress; Ferroptosis; Cardiolipin; Coenzyme Q

Funding

  1. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
  2. Office of Dietary Supplements Research Scholars Program, National Institutes of Health
  3. [U54DK11085804]
  4. [1S10OD018210-01A1]
  5. [1S10OD021505-01]

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Iron is an essential nutrient that forms cofactors required for cellular protein activity, but can be toxic if not properly managed. PCBP1 is a multifunctional protein that binds iron and nucleic acids, regulating their fate. Deletion of PCBP1 in the liver results in dysregulated iron balance, leading to chronic liver disease with lipid accumulation and mitochondrial dysfunction. Supplementation with coenzyme Q is necessary to restore mitochondrial function in this context of ongoing oxidative damage.
Iron is an essential nutrient that forms cofactors required for the activity of hundreds of cellular proteins. However, iron can be toxic and must be precisely managed. Poly r(C) binding protein 1 (PCBP1) is an essential, multifunctional protein that binds both iron and nucleic acids, regulating the fate of both. As an iron chaperone, PCBP1 binds cytosolic iron and delivers it to iron enzymes for activation and to ferritin for storage. Mice deleted for PCBP1 in the liver exhibit dysregulated iron balance, with lower levels of liver iron stores and iron enzymes, but higher levels of chemically-reactive iron. Unchaperoned iron triggers the formation of reactive oxygen species, leading to lipid peroxidation and ferroptotic cell death. Hepatic PCBP1 deletion produces chronic liver disease in mice, with steatosis, triglyceride accumulation, and elevated plasma ALT levels. Human and mouse models of fatty liver disease are associated with mitochondrial dysfunction. Here we show that, although deletion of PCBP1 does not affect mitochondrial iron balance, it does affect mitochondrial function. PCBP1 deletion affected mitochondrial morphology and reduced levels of respiratory complexes II and IV, oxygen consumption, and ATP production. Depletion of mitochondrial lipids cardiolipin and coenzyme Q, along with reduction of mitochondrial oxygen consumption, were the first manifestations of mitochondrial dysfunction. Although dietary supplementation with vitamin E ameliorated the liver disease in mice with hepatic PCBP1 deletion, supplementation with coenzyme Q was required to fully restore mitochondrial lipids and function. In conclusion, our studies indicate that mitochondrial function can be restored in livers subjected to ongoing oxidative damage from unchaperoned iron by supplementation with coenzyme Q, a mitochondrial lipid essential for respiration that also functions as a lipophilic radical-trapping agent.

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