Publication | Open Access
Heme oxygenase 1 mediates an adaptive response to oxidative stress in human skin fibroblasts.
513
Citations
19
References
1994
Year
Iron MetabolismDermatologyRedox BiologyOxidative StressInflammationHematologyHuman Skin FibroblastsHealth SciencesRedox SignalingBiochemistryHeme SignalingUva RadiationReactive Oxygen SpecieHeme HomeostasisAdaptive ResponseCell BiologyMembrane DamageHeme DegradationPhysiologyWound HealingMedicine
Oxidative stress of human skin fibroblasts by treatment with ultraviolet A (UVA) radiation has been shown to lead to an increase in levels of the heme catabolizing enzyme heme oxygenase 1 [heme, hydrogen-donor:oxygen oxidoreductase (alpha-methene-oxidizing, hydroxylating), EC 1.14.99.3] and the iron storage protein ferritin. Here we show that human skin fibroblasts, preirradiated with UVA, sustain less membrane damage during a subsequent exposure to UVA radiation than cells that had not been preirradiated. Pretreating cells with heme oxygenase 1 antisense oligonucleotide inhibited the irradiation-dependent induction of both the heme oxygenase I enzyme and ferritin and abolished the protective effect of preirradiation. Inhibition of the UVA preirradiation-dependent increase in ferritin, but not heme oxygenase, with desferrioxamine also abolished the protection. This identifies heme oxygenase 1 as a crucial enzymatic intermediate in an oxidant stress-inducible antioxidant defense mechanism, involving ferritin, in human skin fibroblasts.
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