Author
Listed:
- Eizo Marutani
(Massachusetts General Hospital
Harvard Medical School)
- Masanobu Morita
(Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine)
- Shuichi Hirai
(Massachusetts General Hospital
Harvard Medical School)
- Shinichi Kai
(Massachusetts General Hospital
Harvard Medical School)
- Robert M. H. Grange
(Massachusetts General Hospital
Harvard Medical School)
- Yusuke Miyazaki
(Massachusetts General Hospital
Harvard Medical School)
- Fumiaki Nagashima
(Massachusetts General Hospital
Harvard Medical School)
- Lisa Traeger
(Massachusetts General Hospital
Harvard Medical School)
- Aurora Magliocca
(Massachusetts General Hospital
Harvard Medical School)
- Tomoaki Ida
(Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine)
- Tetsuro Matsunaga
(Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine)
- Daniel R. Flicker
(Harvard Medical School
Massachusetts General Hospital
Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard)
- Benjamin Corman
(Massachusetts General Hospital
Massachusetts General Hospital)
- Naohiro Mori
(Massachusetts General Hospital
Harvard Medical School)
- Yumiko Yamazaki
(Massachusetts General Hospital)
- Annabelle Batten
(Massachusetts General Hospital)
- Rebecca Li
(Massachusetts General Hospital)
- Tomohiro Tanaka
(National Institutes of Natural Sciences)
- Takamitsu Ikeda
(Massachusetts General Hospital
Harvard Medical School)
- Akito Nakagawa
(Massachusetts General Hospital
Harvard Medical School)
- Dmitriy N. Atochin
(Harvard Medical School
Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts General Hospital)
- Hideshi Ihara
(Osaka Prefecture University)
- Benjamin A. Olenchock
(Harvard Medical School
The Brigham and Women’s Hospital)
- Xinggui Shen
(Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center-Shreveport)
- Motohiro Nishida
(National Institutes of Natural Sciences
Kyushu University)
- Kenjiro Hanaoka
(The University of Tokyo)
- Christopher G. Kevil
(Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center-Shreveport)
- Ming Xian
(Brown University)
- Donald B. Bloch
(Massachusetts General Hospital
Harvard Medical School
Massachusetts General Hospital)
- Takaaki Akaike
(Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine)
- Allyson G. Hindle
(Massachusetts General Hospital
Harvard Medical School
University of Nevada Las Vegas)
- Hozumi Motohashi
(Tohoku University)
- Fumito Ichinose
(Massachusetts General Hospital
Harvard Medical School)
Abstract
The mammalian brain is highly vulnerable to oxygen deprivation, yet the mechanism underlying the brain’s sensitivity to hypoxia is incompletely understood. Hypoxia induces accumulation of hydrogen sulfide, a gas that inhibits mitochondrial respiration. Here, we show that, in mice, rats, and naturally hypoxia-tolerant ground squirrels, the sensitivity of the brain to hypoxia is inversely related to the levels of sulfide:quinone oxidoreductase (SQOR) and the capacity to catabolize sulfide. Silencing SQOR increased the sensitivity of the brain to hypoxia, whereas neuron-specific SQOR expression prevented hypoxia-induced sulfide accumulation, bioenergetic failure, and ischemic brain injury. Excluding SQOR from mitochondria increased sensitivity to hypoxia not only in the brain but also in heart and liver. Pharmacological scavenging of sulfide maintained mitochondrial respiration in hypoxic neurons and made mice resistant to hypoxia. These results illuminate the critical role of sulfide catabolism in energy homeostasis during hypoxia and identify a therapeutic target for ischemic brain injury.
Suggested Citation
Eizo Marutani & Masanobu Morita & Shuichi Hirai & Shinichi Kai & Robert M. H. Grange & Yusuke Miyazaki & Fumiaki Nagashima & Lisa Traeger & Aurora Magliocca & Tomoaki Ida & Tetsuro Matsunaga & Daniel , 2021.
"Sulfide catabolism ameliorates hypoxic brain injury,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 12(1), pages 1-19, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:12:y:2021:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-021-23363-x
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-23363-x
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