4.3 Article

Detection of hydrogen peroxide production in the isolated rat lung using Amplex red

Journal

FREE RADICAL RESEARCH
Volume 52, Issue 9, Pages 1052-1062

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10715762.2018.1511051

Keywords

Complex I; complex II; complex III; hydrogen peroxide; hyperoxia; NAD(P)H oxidase; reactive oxygen species probes

Funding

  1. NIH [1R15HL129209, 1R01HL116530]
  2. Department of Veterans' Affairs (VA Merit review award) [BX001681]

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The objectives of this study were to develop a robust protocol to measure the rate of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) production in isolated perfused rat lungs, as an index of oxidative stress, and to determine the cellular sources of the measured H2O2 using the extracellular probe Amplex red (AR). AR was added to the recirculating perfusate in an isolated perfused rat lung. AR's highly fluorescent oxidation product resorufin was measured in the perfusate. Experiments were carried out without and with rotenone (complex I inhibitor), thenoyltrifluoroacetone (complex II inhibitor), antimycin A (complex III inhibitor), potassium cyanide (complex IV inhibitor), or diohenylene iodonium (inhibitor of flavin-containing enzymes, e.g. NAD(P)H oxidase or NOX) added to the perfusate. We also evaluated the effect of acute changes in oxygen (O-2) concentration of ventilation gas on lung rate of H2O2 release into the perfusate. Baseline lung rate of H2O2 release was 8.45 +/- 0.31 (SEM) nmol/min/g dry wt. Inhibiting mitochondrial complex II reduced this rate by 76%, and inhibiting flavin-containing enzymes reduced it by another 23%. Inhibiting complex I had a small (13%) effect on the rate, whereas inhibiting complex Ill had no effect. Inhibiting complex IV increased this rate by 310%. Increasing %O-2 in the ventilation gas mixture from 15 to 95% had a small (27%) effect on this rate, and this O-2 -dependent increase was mostly nonmitochondrial. Results suggest complex II as a potentially important source and/or regulator of mitochondrial H2O2, and that most of acute hyperoxia-enhanced lung rate of H2O2 release is from nonmitochondrial rather than mitochondrial sources.

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