4.7 Review

Redox regulation of mitochondrial biogenesis

Journal

FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 53, Issue 11, Pages 2043-2053

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2012.09.014

Keywords

Carbon monoxide; Cell metabolism; Heme oxygenase; Inflammation; Mitochondria; Nitric oxide; Oxidative stress; Reactive oxygen species; Free radicals

Funding

  1. NIH [HL090679, GM084116]

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The cell renews, adapts, or expands its mitochondrial population during episodes of cell damage or periods of intensified energy demand by the induction of mitochondrial biogenesis. This bigenomic program is modulated by redox-sensitive signals that respond to physiological nitric oxide (NO), carbon monoxide (CO), and mitochondrial reactive oxygen species production. This review summarizes our current ideas about the pathways involved ill the activation of mitochondrial biogenesis by the physiological gases leading to changes in the redox milieu of the cell, with an emphasis on the responses to oxidative stress and inflammation. The cell's energy supply is protected from conditions that damage mitochondria by an inducible transcriptional program of mitochondrial biogenesis that operates in large part through redox signals involving the nitric oxide synthase and the heme oxygenase-1/CO systems. These redox events stimulate the coordinated activities of several multifunctional transcription factors and coactivators also involved ill the elimination of defective mitochondria and the expression of counterinflammatory and antioxidant genes, such as IL10 and SOD2, as part of a unified damage-control network. The redox-regulated mechanisms of mitochondrial biogenesis schematically outlined in the graphical abstract link mitochondrial quality control to an enhanced capacity to support the cell's metabolic needs while improving its resistance to metabolic failure and avoidance of cell death during periods of oxidative stress. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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