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Query: UNIPROT:P02794 (
ferritin
)
17,525
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Activation of expression of the heme oxygenase (HO) gene appears to be involved in a cellular defense system in mammalian cells. We now demonstrate that while HO-1 mRNA levels are strongly inducible in dermal fibroblasts they are barely inducible in human epidermal keratinocytes following oxidative stress (UVA radiation and hydrogen peroxide). Paralleling this result was the observation that
HO-2
mRNA levels were low in dermal fibroblasts but were high in epidermal keratinocytes. In neither case was the
HO-2
gene inducible. The expression of the two HO genes led to enzymatic activity in both types of skin cells with an approximately 2.5-fold higher level of enzymatic activity present in keratinocytes compared with fibroblasts derived from the same biopsy. In addition,
ferritin
levels, which have been found to be augmented via the HO-dependent release of iron from endogenous heme sources, were two- to three-fold higher in keratinocytes compared with matching fibroblasts. This higher
ferritin
pool would result in an enhancement of cellular iron sequestering capacity that may confer increased resistance to oxidative stress. Indeed, keratinocytes showed less UVA radiation-dependent cell membrane damage than fibroblasts. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that HO expression in human epidermis and dermis is related to cellular defense mechanisms that operate in human skin.
...
PMID:Two genes contribute to different extents to the heme oxygenase enzyme activity measured in cultured human skin fibroblasts and keratinocytes: implications for protection against oxidant stress. 771 90
The heme oxygenase isozymes, HO-1 and
HO-2
, oxidatively cleave the heme molecule to produce antioxidants, the bile pigments, the gaseous cellular messenger, CO, and iron, a regulator of transferrin,
ferritin
, and nitric oxide synthase gene expression. HO-1 (hsp32) is a stress-inducible enzyme, whereas
HO-2
is constitutively expressed at high levels in the testes and brain. In the present study, using immunohistochemical and in situ hybridization techniques, we report for the first time the cellular distribution of HO-1 and
HO-2
in the testes of normal and heat-shocked rats and define a cell-specific expression of the isozymes and a stage-specific expression of
HO-2
in the organ. In normal tissue, HO-1 was present at low levels in the Sertoli cells and could not be detected in germ or Leydig cells.
HO-2
, on the other hand, was most prominently expressed in residual bodies and was not detected in spermatogonia. Modest levels of
HO-2
were observed in spermatocytes, spermatids, and select Leydig cells. In contrast, prominent expression of
HO-2
messenger RNAs (mRNAs) was detected by in situ hybridization in spermatogonia, as well as spermatocytes, spermatids, and residual bodies of the seminiferous epithelium. The expression pattern of
HO-2
protein and transcript in testes of heat-stressed (42 C; 20 min) rats did not differ from that in the control animals, whereas the expression pattern of HO-1 differed from that in the controls, in which distinct populations of Leydig and Sertoli cells displayed intense immunoreactivity. Thermal stress also resulted in an increase (2.8-fold) in the testicular HO-1 mRNA level within 1 h after treatment, followed by a significant increase (32%) in total microsomal heme oxygenase activity 6 h after treatment. Notably, this increase followed a significant depression (36%) in enzyme activity, which was detected 1 h after hyperthermia. The disparity between
HO-2
mRNA and protein distribution clearly indicates cell-specific differences in the translational efficiency of
HO-2
transcripts. It appears that
HO-2
mRNA translation is linked to the maturation and expression of a factor(s) that regulates this process. This, in turn, appears to coincide with sperm development. HO-1 activity, on the other hand, which has a transcriptional component to its regulation, may have a role in maintenance of the conditions required for spermatogenesis.
...
PMID:Distribution of constitutive (HO-2) and heat-inducible (HO-1) heme oxygenase isozymes in rat testes: HO-2 displays stage-specific expression in germ cells. 772 Jun 78
Heme oxygenase (HO) proteins are members of the HSP30 family and consist of 2 isozymes identified to date, termed HO-1 and
HO-2
. Separate genes encode the isozymes and protein products which are immunochemically distinct, share less than 50% similarity at the amino acid sequence level. Each form, however, shows greater than 90% similarity among species, including human and the rat (reviewed in ref.). Furthermore, these isozymes function in a well-defined role to carry out oxidation of the heme molecule (Fe-protoporphyrin IX) in concert with NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase. The oxidation of heme is isomer specific and results in the formation of bile pigments, carbon monoxide, and iron. The heme molecule constitutes the prosthetic moiety of hemoproteins, such as hemoglobin, myoglobin, catalase, soluble guanylate cyclase, cytochrome b5, cytochromes P450 and NO synthase. HO-1 also known as heat shock protein (HSP) 32 is encoded by a gene which is exquisitely stress-responsive and a host of stimuli that mediate oxidative stress cause induction of the protein both in vivo and in vitro. The
HO-2
form shows a unique pattern of regulation from that of HO-1.
HO-2
is a constitutive protein and its expression is not affected by the inducers of HO-1 tested to date; rather, the only known regulator of
HO-2
yet identified is adrenal glucocorticoids. The two isozymes display vast differences in tissue distribution and under normal conditions HO-1 is present in the whole brain at the limit of immunodetection and is discreetly localized in select neuronal populations. HO-1 protein (approximately 32 kDa) and its approximately 1.8 kb transcript are increased, however, in response to stressful stimuli primarily in non-neuronal cell populations. The heme oxygenase system serves in both a catabolic and anabolic capacity in the cell. In the former capacity, it down-regulates cellular heme and hemoprotein levels. And, as such it inactivates the most effective catalyst for formation of free radicals, the heme molecule. In its anabolic role, as noted above, heme oxygenase produces bile pigments, carbon monoxide, and iron, all of which are biologically active: bile pigments function as antioxidants; the carbon monoxide generated by HO activity has been correlated with the generation of cGMP; and iron regulates expression of various genes, including that of HO-1 itself, as well as transferrin receptors,
ferritin
, and NO synthase. We used rabbit anti-rat
HO-2
polyclonal antibody and
HO-2
cDNA to localize
HO-2
immunoreactive protein and the 1.3- and 1.9 kb homologous transcripts, respectively, in rodent brain as visualized by histochemical staining procedures. These protocols provide the first detailed description of methodologies successfully used to define the pattern of
HO-2
expression at the transcriptional and translational levels in the adult rat brain and glucocorticoid-treated newborn rats. The procedures described herein have the virtue of being non-radioactive, as well as applicability to the systemic organs, such as the cardiovascular system and the male reproductive organs. Visualization of cellular
HO-2
expression aids in assessment of potential sites of carbon monoxide, iron, and bilirubin production within the nervous system.
...
PMID:Histochemical localization of heme oxygenase-2 protein and mRNA expression in rat brain. 938 81
Heme oxygenase (HO) activity leads to accumulation of the antioxidant bilirubin, and degradation of the prooxidant heme. Moderate overexpression of the inducible form, HO-1, is associated with protection against oxidative injury. However, the role of
HO-2
in oxidative stress has not been explored. We evaluated survival, indices of oxidative injury, and lung and HO expression in
HO-2
null mutant mice exposed to > 95% O2 compared with wild-type controls. Similar basal levels of major lung antioxidants were observed, except that the knockouts had a twofold increase in total glutathione content. Despite increased HO-1 expression from HO-1 induction, knockout animals were sensitized to hyperoxia-induced oxidative injury and mortality, and also had significantly increased markers of oxidative injury before hyperoxic exposure. Furthermore, during hyperoxia, lung hemoproteins and iron content were significantly increased without increased
ferritin
, suggesting accumulation of available redox-active iron. These results demonstrate that the absence of
HO-2
is associated with induction of HO-1 and increased oxygen toxicity in vivo, apparently due to accumulation of lung iron. These results suggest that
HO-2
functions to augment the turnover of lung iron during oxidative stress, and that this function does not appear to be compensated for by induction of HO-1 in the knockouts.
...
PMID:Oxygen toxicity and iron accumulation in the lungs of mice lacking heme oxygenase-2. 948 70
The ultraviolet A (UVA, 320-400 nm) component of sunlight has the potential to generate an oxidative stress in cells and tissue so that antioxidants (both endogenous and exogenous) strongly influence the biological effects of UVA. The expression of several genes (including heme oxygenase-1, HO-1; collagenase; the CL100 phosphatase and the nuclear oncogenes, c-fos and c-jun) is induced following physiological doses of UVA to cells and this effect can be strongly enhanced by removing intracellular glutathione or enhancing singlet oxygen lifetime. We have observed that heme is released from microsomal heme-containing proteins by UVA and other oxidants and that activation of HO-1 expression by UVA correlates with levels of heme release. UVA radiation also leads to an increase in labile iron pools (either directly or via HO-1) and eventual increases in
ferritin
levels. The role of heme oxygenase in protection of skin fibroblasts is probably an emergency inducible defense pathway to remove heme liberated by oxidants. The slower increase in
ferritin
levels is an adaptive response which serves to keep labile iron pools low and thereby reduce Fenton chemistry and oxidant-induced chain reactions involving lipid peroxidation. In keratinocytes, the primary target of UVA radiation, heme oxygenase levels are constitutively high (because of
HO-2
expression). Since there is a corresponding increase in basal levels of
ferritin
the epidermis appears to be well protected constitutively against the oxidative stress generated by UVA.
...
PMID:Redox regulation and oxidant activation of heme oxygenase-1. 1051 38
Heme oxygenase (HO) is responsible for the physiological breakdown of heme into equimolar amounts of biliverdin, carbon monoxide, and iron. Three isoforms (HO-1,
HO-2
, and HO-3) have been identified. HO-1 is ubiquitous and its mRNA and activity can be increased several-fold by heme, other metalloporphyrins, transition metals, and stimuli that induce cellular stress. HO-1 is recognized as a major heat shock/stress response protein. Recent work from our laboratory has demonstrated several potential consensus regulatory elements in the 5'-untranslated region (UTR) of HO-1, including activator protein 1 (AP-1), metal responsive element (MRE), oncogene c-myc/max heterodimer binding site (Myc/Max), antioxidant response element (ARE), and GC box binding (Sp1) sites. Using deletion-reporter gene constructs, we have mapped sites that mediate the arsenite-dependent induction of HO-1, and we have shown that components of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and p38 (a homologue of the yeast HOG1 kinase), but not c-jun N-terminal kinase (JNK), mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase pathways are involved in arsenite-dependent upregulation. In contrast,
HO-2
is present chiefly in the brain and testes and is virtually uninducible. HO-3 has very low activity; its physiological function probably involves heme binding. Products of the HO reaction have important effects: carbon monoxide is a potent vasodilator, which is thought to play a key role in the modulation of vascular tone, especially in the liver under physiological conditions, and in many organs under "stressful" conditions associated with HO-1 induction. Biliverdin and its product bilirubin, formed in most mammals, are potent antioxidants. In contrast, "free" iron increases oxidative stress and regulates the expression of many mRNAs (e.g., DCT-1,
ferritin
, and transferrin receptor) by affecting the conformation of iron regulatory protein (IRP)-1 and its binding to iron regulatory elements (IREs) in the 5'- or 3'-UTRs of the mRNAs.
...
PMID:Heme oxygenase: recent advances in understanding its regulation and role. 1051 65
Ferrous Hb contributes to cerebral vasospasm after subarachnoid hemorrhage, although the mechanisms involved are uncertain. The hypothesis that cytotoxic effects of ferrous Hb on smooth muscle cells contribute to vasospasm was assessed. Cultured rat basilar artery smooth muscle cells were exposed to pure Hb, dog erythrocyte hemolysate, or Hb breakdown products; and heme oxygenase (HO-1 and
HO-2
) and
ferritin
mRNA and protein were measured. Cytotoxicity was assessed by lactate dehydrogenase release and fluorescence assays. Pure Hb or hemolysate caused dose- and time-dependent increases in HO-1 mRNA and protein. Hemin was the component of Hb that increased HO-1 mRNA. Cycloheximide inhibited the increase in HO-1 mRNA in response to hemin. Ferritin protein heavy chain but not mRNA increased upon exposure of cells to Hb. Hemin and ferric but not ferrous Hb were toxic to smooth muscle cells. Toxicity was increased by exposure to Hb plus tin protoporphyrin IX. In conclusion, exposure of smooth muscle cells to Hb induces HO-1 mRNA and protein through pathways that involve new protein synthesis. Hemin is the component of Hb that induces HO-1. Hemin and ferric but not ferrous Hb are toxic.
...
PMID:Effects of hemoglobin on heme oxygenase gene expression and viability of cultured smooth muscle cells. 1104 78
When cortical neurons are exposed to hemoglobin, they undergo oxidative stress that ultimately results in iron-dependent cell death. Heme oxygenase (HO)-2 is constitutively expressed in neurons and catalyzes heme breakdown. Its role in the cellular response to hemoglobin is unclear. We tested the hypothesis that
HO-2
attenuates hemoglobin neurotoxicity by comparing reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation and cell death in wild-type and
HO-2
knockout cortical cultures. Consistent with prior observations, hemoglobin increased ROS generation, detected by fluorescence intensity after dihydrorhodamine 123 or dichlorofluorescin-diacetate loading, in wild-type neurons. This fluorescence was significantly attenuated in cultures prepared from
HO-2
knockout mice, and cell death as determined by propidium iodide staining was decreased. In other experiments, hemoglobin exposure was continued for 19 h; cell death as quantified by LDH release was decreased in knockout cultures, and was further diminished by treatment with the HO inhibitor tin protoporphyrin IX. In contrast,
HO-2
knockout neurons were more vulnerable than wild-type neurons to inorganic iron. HO-1,
ferritin
, and superoxide dismutase expression in
HO-2
-/- cultures did not differ significantly from that observed in
HO-2
+/+ cultures; cellular glutathione levels were slightly higher in knockout cultures. These results suggest that heme breakdown by heme oxygenase accelerates the oxidative neurotoxicity of hemoglobin, and may contribute to neuronal injury after CNS hemorrhage.
...
PMID:Heme oxygenase-2 knockout neurons are less vulnerable to hemoglobin toxicity. 1455 51
Heme oxygenase (HO) degrades heme to carbon monoxide (CO), ferrous ions, and the bile pigment biliverdin, which is subsequently reduced to the other important bile pigment, bilirubin, by biliverdin reductase. Fe2+ liberated from the heme molecule upregulates
ferritin
production, and bile pigments are potent endogenous antioxidants. The HO enzyme exists in three isophorms: HO-1 is expressed at low levels under physiological conditions, but is induced by numerous factors, including oxidative stress, inflammation, nitric oxide, an elevated level of substrate, and hypoxia.
HO-2
is a constitutive enzyme involved in the baseline production of CO in the cardiovascular and nervous systems, whereas HO-3 is also ubiquitously expressed, but possesses low catalytic activity. Like nitric oxide, CO activates soluble guanylate cyclase and elevates cGMP in target tissues, which dilates blood vessels. It also does this by directly activating potassium channels in vascular smooth muscle cells. In addition, CO inhibits platelet aggregation and proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells, inhibits apoptosis, and stimulates angiogenesis. Both deficiency, and excess of HO-1 may be involved in the pathogenesis of arterial hypertension. Induction of HO-1 attenuates atherosclerosis and myocardial ischemia-reperfusion injury. Pharmacological and genetic induction of HO-1 as well as the delivery of exogenous CO are promising therapeutic strategies for the treatment of cardiovascular diseases.
...
PMID:[Heme oxygenase and carbon monoxide in the physiology and pathology of the cardiovascular system]. 1506 78
The heme oxygenase isozymes, HO-1 and
HO-2
, oxidatively cleave the heme molecule to produce biliverdin and the gaseous messenger, CO. The cleavage results in the release of iron, a regulator of transferrin,
ferritin
, and nitric oxide (NO) synthase gene expression. Biliverdin reductase (BVR) then catalyzes the reduction of biliverdin, generating the potent intracellular antioxidant, bilirubin. We report an age-related decrease in HO-1 and
HO-2
expression present in select brain regions including the hippocampus and the substantia nigra, that are involved in the high order cognitive processes of learning and memory. The age-related loss of monoxide-producing potential in select regions of the brain was not specific to the HO system but was also observed in neuronal NO-generating system. Furthermore, compared to 2-month old rats, the ability of aged brain tissue to respond to hypoxic/hyperthermia was compromised at both the protein and the transcription levels as judged by attenuated induction of HO-1 immunoreactive protein and its 1.8 Kb transcript. Neotrofin (AIT), a cognitive-enhancing and neuroprotective drug, caused a robust increase in HO-1 immunoreactive protein in select neuronal regions and increased the expression of
HO-2
transcripts. The potential interplay between regulation of
HO-2
gene expression and the serum levels of the adrenal steroids is discussed. We suggest the search for therapeutic agents that reverse the decline and aberrant stress response of HO enzymes may lead to effective treatment regimens for age-associated neuronal deficits.
...
PMID:Regulation and expression of heme oxygenase enzymes in aged-rat brain: age related depression in HO-1 and HO-2 expression and altered stress-response. 1646 64
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