Abstract

Oxygen sensing was investigated in rat pheochromocytoma PC12 cells. They respond to hypoxia with an increased intracellular generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS), measured by oxidation of dihydrorhodamine 123. This increase is abolished by intracellular superoxide scavenging by Mn(III)-tetrakis(1-methyl-4-pyridyl)-porphyrin, and reduced or absent in the presence of the flavoprotein/complex I inhibitors, diphenyleneiodonium and rotenone. The same inhibitors, but neither intra- nor extracellular (superoxide dismutase) superoxide scavenging, abolish the hypoxia-induced increase in tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) gene expression. Thus, ROS production increases in PC12 cells during hypoxia, but this is not the cause of hypoxic TH mRNA upregulation that involves a flavoprotein.

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