4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Transgenic and knockout models for studying the role of lung antioxidant enzymes in defense against hyperoxia

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AMER THORACIC SOC
DOI: 10.1164/rccm.2206017

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reactive oxygen species; superoxide dismutase; glutathione peroxidase; oxidant-mediated tissue injury

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Although a role for antioxidant enzymes in preventing lung injury from hyperoxic exposure has been implicated in a number of early studies, a direct test for the hypothesis was not available. We intended to address this question using genetically modified mice in which the expression of a single antioxidant enzyme was either enhanced or diminished. We reasoned that if an antioxidant enzyme functions in protecting lung cells against oxidant-mediated injury, the level of its gene expression would correlate with the degree of tolerance to hyperoxia. Overexpression of functional human manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) in lung alveolar type I and type 11 cells, fibroblasts, and capillary endothelial cells in strain B6C3 mice was achieved by incorporating a human beta-actin promoter-based MnSOD transgene into the mouse genome. However, MnSOD overexpression failed to prolong the survival of transgenic mice on exposure to greater than 99% oxygen compared with wildtype mice. In addition, mice deficient in copper-zinc superoxide dismutase or cellular glutathione peroxidase exhibited a marked sensitivity to numerous models of oxidant tissue injury but were not hypersensitive to hyperoxia. These data suggest that the role of these three antioxidant enzymes in preventing oxidant-mediated lung injury from hyperoxic exposure is negligible, and other cellular antioxidant enzymes and systems may be primarily used by the lungs in defense against hyperoxia.

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