[Research Article] Hypoxia as a therapy for mitochondrial disease

Defects in the mitochondrial respiratory chain (RC) underlie a spectrum of human conditions, ranging from devastating inborn errors of metabolism to aging. We performed a genome-wide Cas9-mediated screen to identify factors that are protective during RC inhibition. Our results highlight the hypoxia response, an endogenous program evolved to adapt to limited oxygen availability. Genetic or small-molecule activation of the hypoxia response is protective against mitochondrial toxicity in cultured cells and zebrafish models. Chronic hypoxia leads to a marked improvement in survival, body weight, body temperature, behavior, neuropathology, and disease biomarkers in a genetic mouse model of Leigh syndrome, the most common pediatric manifestation of mitochondrial disease. Further preclinical studies are required to assess whether hypoxic exposure can be developed into a safe and effective treatment for human diseases associated with mitochondrial dysfunction. Authors: Isha H. Jain, Luca Zazzeron, Rahul Goli, Kristen Alexa, Stephanie Schatzman-Bone, Harveen Dhillon, Olga Goldberger, Jun Peng, Ophir Shalem, Neville E. Sanjana, Feng Zhang, Wolfram Goessling, Warren M. Zapol, Vamsi K. Mootha
Source: ScienceNOW - Category: Science Authors: Source Type: news