Involvement of the mitochondrial nuclease EndoG in the regulation of cell proliferation through the control of reactive oxygen species.
Blasco. Natividad N; Beà. Aida A; Barés. Gisel G; Girón. Cristina C; Navaridas. Raúl R; Irazoki. Andrea A; López-Lluch. Guillermo G; Zorzano. Antonio A; Dolcet. Xavier X; Llovera. Marta M; Sanchis. Daniel D
Key Findings
- EndoG loss raises ROS and slows cell division by dampening AKT‑GSK‑3β‑Cyclin D signaling
- Humanin added to EndoG‑deficient cells restores AKT activation and cell proliferation despite high ROS
- Humanin’s effect is independent of changing ROS‑detoxifying enzymes or mitochondrial respiration
Practical Outcomes
- Humanin may be a useful supplement to support cell growth and possibly counteract age‑related declines in tissue regeneration, but the research is still early and done in cells and rodents. Biohackers should wait for human dosing, safety, and clinical data before adding it to a regimen.
Summary
The study shows that the tiny protein Humanin can help cells keep dividing even when a mitochondrial enzyme (EndoG) is missing, by fixing a signaling pathway (AKT) that’s blocked by high reactive oxygen species (ROS). It doesn’t lower ROS itself, but it still restores cell growth.
Abstract
The apoptotic nuclease EndoG is involved in mitochondrial DNA replication. Previous results suggested that, in addition to regulate cardiomyocyte hypertrophy, EndoG could be involved in cell proliferation. Here, by using in vivo and cell culture models, we investigated the role of EndoG in cell proliferation. Genetic deletion of Endog both in vivo and in cultured cells or Endog silencing in vitro induced a defect in rodent and human cell proliferation with a tendency of cells to accumulate in the G<sub>1</sub> phase of cell cycle and increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) production. The defect in cell proliferation occurred with a decrease in the activity of the AKT/PKB-GSK-3β-Cyclin D axis and was reversed by addition of ROS scavengers. EndoG deficiency did not affect the expression of ROS detoxifying enzymes, nor the expression of the electron transport chain complexes and oxygen consumption rate. Addition of the micropeptide Humanin to EndoG-deficient cells restored AKT phosphorylation and proliferation without lowering ROS levels. Thus, our results show that EndoG is important for cell proliferation through the control of ROS and that Humanin can restore cell division in EndoG-deficient cells and counteracts the effects of ROS on AKT phosphorylation.
Study Information
pubmed
2020
2020-09-24T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.redox.2020.101736
15
52