Paradoxically, prior acquisition of antioxidant activity enhances oxidative stress-induced cell death

Omer Murik, Aaron Kaplan*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

35 Scopus citations

Abstract

Oxidative stress has been implicated in the induction of programmed cell death in a wide variety of organisms. Acquiring antioxidant capacity is thought to enhance the viability of cells challenged by a subsequent oxidative stress. Counter-intuitively, we show that in two phytoplankton species, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Peridinium gatunense, representing the green and red plastid lineages, oxidative stress induced cell death in cultures that already possessed high antioxidant activity but not in cells that exhibited low activity. Cell death of low antioxidant possessing cultures was markedly enhanced by the addition of dehydroascorbate, a product of ascorbate peroxidase (APX), but not of ascorbate or reduced glutathione, and was preceded by increased metacaspase expression and activity. These data suggested that the level of APX and its products, strongly upregulated by oxidative stress, serves as a possible surveillance signal, reporting that the cells already experienced an earlier oxidative stress. Our data presents a novel role of APX in antioxidant activity and response to oxidative stress in photosynthetic microorganisms. Elimination of cysts production by phytoplankton cells that were already damaged by oxidative stress (indicated by the rise in oxidized proteins) as the inoculum for the following year's population may be the evolutionary trigger for this phenomenon.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2301-2309
Number of pages9
JournalEnvironmental Microbiology
Volume11
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2009

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