Abstract
There are two types of intracellular superoxide dismutases: the mitochondrial manganese SOD (MnSOD) and the cytoplasmic copper/zinc SOD (CuZnSOD). Mutant mice that lack MnSOD die shortly after birth because of cardiomyopathy and mitochondrial injury. In order to verify if CuZnSOD could compensate for MnSOD deficiency, a new mutant mouse that overexpresses CuZnSOD but is deficient in MnSOD was generated by crossing MnSOD knockout mice with CuZnSOD transgenic mice. CuZnSOD activity was significantly increased in the blood, brain, liver, and heart of MnSOD knockout, CuZnSOD transgenic mice when compared with nontransgenic mice. However, overexpression of CuZnSOD did not prevent neonatal lethality in mice that lack MnSOD, nor did it prevent oxidative aconitase inactivation, nor did it rescue MnSOD-deficient astrocytes in culture. Based on our findings, which emphasize the strong enzymatic compartmentalization of CuZnSOD and MnSOD, therapeutic antioxidant strategies should consider the final intracellular localization of the antioxidant used, especially when those strategies are directed against mitochondrial diseases.
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