Thursday, August 14, 2008
Age alters expression and inducibility of heme oxygenase isozymes in mice
Abstract  Heme oxygenase (HO) performs the rate limiting step in heme degradation and is induced by cell injury or stress. We wished         to determine if dietary fatty acid composition, increased age and/or an induced oxidative stress would alter the expression         of HO-1 (constitutive and inducible isozyme) or of HO-2 (constitutive isozyme), in mouse liver, spleen and brain. Six-and         24-month-old male B6C3F1 mice were fed AIN-76A diets containing either 5% corn oil (CO, moderately unsaturated, n=5 per age         group) or 19% menhaden fish oil plus 1% corn oil (FO, highly polyunsaturated, n=20 per age group). After 2 weeks, 5 CO and         5 FO fed mice in each age group were sacrificed. The remaining FO diet mice (n=15 per age group) were then challenged with         a systemic oxidative stress by intraperitoneal injection of 125 mg iron/kg body weight as iron dextran. Five stressed mice         from each age group were sacrificed 1, 5, and 24 hours post injection; liver, spleen and brain were removed. Part of each         tissue was fixed in formalin, and microsomal protein isolated from the remaining tissue. HO-1 and HO-2 were detected by immunoblot         of microsomal protein and by immunohistochemical staining of fixed tissue in the liver and spleen, but only HO-2 was detected         in the brain. There was no significant difference in HO-1 or HO-2 expression due to diet. The liver of old unstressed mice         had significantly more HO-1 than young mice. However, HO-1 was significantly induced in the livers of young mice, but not         of old mice, following oxidative stress. Spleen HO-1 expression was not significantly altered by age or oxidative stress.         HO-2 expression was not significantly altered by age or induced oxidative stress in any tissue examined. Age-related alterations         in liver HO-1 isozyme expression and inducibility may contribute to increased susceptibility to exogenous stress and disease.
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