Genetic silencing of Nrf2 enhances X-ROS in dysferlin-deficient muscle

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Abstract

Oxidative stress is a critical disease modifier in the muscular dystrophies. Recently, we discovered a pathway by which mechanical stretch activates NADPH Oxidase 2 (Nox2) dependent ROS generation (X-ROS). Our work in dystrophic skeletal muscle revealed that X-ROS is excessive in dystrophin-deficient (mdx) skeletal muscle and contributes to muscle injury susceptibility, a hallmark of the dystrophic process. We also observed widespread alterations in the expression of genes associated with the X-ROS pathway and redox homeostasis in muscles from both Duchenne muscular dystrophy patients and mdx mice. As nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2) plays an essential role in the transcriptional regulation of genes involved in redox homeostasis, we hypothesized that Nrf2 deficiency may contribute to enhanced X-ROS signaling by reducing redox buffering. To directly test the effect of diminished Nrf2 activity, Nrf2 was genetically silenced in the A/J model of dysferlinopathy-a model with a mild histopathologic and functional phenotype. Nrf2-deficient A/J mice exhibited significant muscle-specific functional deficits, histopathologic abnormalities, and dramatically enhanced X-ROS compared to control A/J and WT mice, both with functional Nrf2. Having identified that reduced Nrf2 activity is a negative disease modifier, we propose that strategies targeting Nrf2 activation may address the generalized reduction in redox homeostasis to halt or slow dystrophic progression. © 2014 Kombairaju, Kerr, Roche, Pratt, Lovering, Sussan, Kim, Shi, Biswal and Ward.

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Kombairaju, P., Kerr, J. P., Roche, J. A., Pratt, S. J. P., Lovering, R. M., Sussan, T. E., … Ward, C. W. (2014). Genetic silencing of Nrf2 enhances X-ROS in dysferlin-deficient muscle. Frontiers in Physiology, 5 FEB. https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2014.00057

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