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Coaxing Longevity from Catalase
5 May 2005. Mice live longer and show signs of delayed aging when they express the antioxidant enzyme catalase in their mitochondria, according to a report appearing today in Science online. The results of the study, by Peter Rabinovitch and his colleagues at the University of Washington in Seattle, support the theory that oxidative damage to cells contributes to aging and eventually death in higher animals. Their results also show that mitochondria, now under intense scrutiny for their role in age-related neurodegenerative disorders, are an important source of toxic reactive oxygen species (ROS) in normal cells. ROS are produced as a byproduct of the pathway that generates energy in the mitochondria, the cell’s power plant. During respiration, electrons escape the mitochondria and react with free oxygen to produce highly toxic negative ions. If left alone, the ions inflict irreversible damage to proteins, lipids, and DNA. Cells can defend themselves with detoxifying enzymes like catalase and superoxide dismutase that break down ROS. The balance between production of ROS and their destruction by antioxidant enzymes determines the rate at which oxidative alterations accumulate, and may set an upper limit on how long we can live. Increasing oxidative damage is also hypothesized to trigger aging-related Alzheimer disease and other neurodegenerative disorders (see live discussion of the “mitochondrial cascade hypothesis” of AD).

To determine whether ROS, and in particular hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), do in fact limit lifespan in mammals, first author Samuel Schriner worked with colleagues from the University of California, Irvine, and University of Texas at San Antonio to create transgenic mice overexpressing human catalase in their mitochondria. Catalase, found mainly in peroxisomes, rapidly converts toxic H2O2 into water and oxygen. In two independent lines of mice, the mitochondrial catalase (MCAT) expressers showed about a 20 percent, or a 5-month, increase in median and maximal lifespan compared to wild-type littermates. The ability of catalase to increase longevity was most apparent when the enzyme was targeted to mitochondria: Mice that expressed the enzyme in peroxisomes (PCAT) had a slightly longer median lifespan, but no increase in maximal life. Nuclear catalase expression had no effect on either parameter.

MCAT mice appeared to age more slowly than their control littermates by several measures. While histological comparisons showed little difference between WT and MCAT lines in young mice (9-11 mo), aged transgenic mice (20-25 mo) had significantly less arteriosclerosis and cardiomyopathy than their wild-type siblings. One strain showed a delay in cataract formation in mid-life. Biochemical studies showed that slower aging in the MCAT mice was associated with a lower level of oxidative stress and DNA damage. H2O2 production by cardiac mitochondria from MCAT mice was decreased 25 percent, and mitochondria containing catalase were protected from the toxic effects of H2O2. Age-related increases in oxidative damage to total DNA, and fragmentation of mitochondrial DNA were also slowed in skeletal muscle of MCAT mice.

Despite the indication that MCAT mice were at least partially spared the ravages of time in terms of oxidative damage, catalase is not quite a fountain of youth. Its effects on lifespan, while significant, are much smaller than those observed with caloric restriction or in some genetic models of aging. The question of whether mitochondrial catalase might be additive or synergistic with other life-lengthening treatments was not addressed. The researchers did show that peroxisomal catalase expression together with superoxide dismutase overexpression increased median lifespan more than either alone, but maximum time of survival was not affected. They speculate that because MCAT mice survive longer than PCAT mice, the combination of MCAT and superoxide dismutase may show even more benefit.

Like the aging brain, AD and Parkinson disease brains show signs of oxidative stress, and mitochondrial dysfunction has been reported in both diseases. In models of AD, ROS appear to enhance Aβ deposition (see ARF related news story), and Aβ itself can be toxic to mitochondria (see ARF related news story), causing an increase in ROS. One of the two MCAT transgenic lines displayed increased catalase expression in the brain, and these animals will no doubt come in handy to further explore the links between the accumulated oxidative insults of normal aging and sporadic AD or other age-related neurodegenerative disease.—Pat McCaffrey.

Reference:
Schriner SE, Linford NJ, Martin GM, Treuting P, Ogburn CE, Emond M, Coskun PE, Ladiges W, Wolf N, Van Remmen H, Wallace DC, Rabinovitch PS. Extension of Murine Lifespan by Overexpression of Catalase Targeted to Mitochondria. Science. 5 May 2005 [early online publication]. Abstract

 
Comments on News and Primary Papers
  Comment by:  Mark Mattson, ARF Advisor
Submitted 5 May 2005  |  Permalink Posted 5 May 2005

The findings of Schriner et al. provide an important advance in understanding the contributions of metabolism of reactive oxygen species to aging and lifespan in mammals. Their data strongly suggest that production of hydrogen peroxide in mitochondria is central to the aging process and that, accordingly, manipulations that detoxify hydrogen peroxide can have an "anti-aging" effect, improving healthspan and lifespan. The design of the study, which involved targeting of catalase to mitochondria, peroxisomes, or the nucleus, was excellent and revealed the complexity of reactive oxygen species production and detoxification in regard to subcellular localization. The availability of their mitochondrial catalase transgenic mice to the biomedical research community will be very valuable in determining the role of mitochondrial hydrogen peroxide in various age-related diseases.

It will be of considerable interest to determine whether the effects of mitochondrial catalase and caloric restriction are complementary or redundant in regard to protection against age-related disease and...  Read more


  Comment by:  P. Hemachandra Reddy
Submitted 5 May 2005  |  Permalink Posted 5 May 2005

The work by Schriner and colleagues is an important advance in understanding the free radical theory of aging and its implications for healthy aging and longevity. These investigators created transgenic mice that overexpress human catalase localized to peroxisomes, nucleus, and mitochondria, and studied the effects of aging from birth to death in these transgenic mouse lines. Interestingly, but not surprisingly, they found that mice that overexpress human catalase targeted to mitochondria exhibited increased lifespan 5.5 months longer relative to control wild-type mice, suggesting that overexpressed catalase in mitochondria decreases reactive oxygen species (ROS) and boosts the mitochondrial function. These events ultimately lead to an extended lifespan. This finding has tremendous implications for healthy aging, longevity, and age-related illnesses, particularly Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and ALS.

The free radical theory of aging, one of the prominent aging hypotheses, holds that during aging, an increase in ROS in mitochondria causes mutations in the mitochondrial DNA and...  Read more


  Comment by:  David Stern, Shirley ShiDu Yan
Submitted 5 May 2005  |  Permalink Posted 5 May 2005

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are generated in several locations within cells, especially in mitochondria, at the cell membrane and in the endoplasmic reticulum. As a consequence of the electron transport chain, there is a leakage of electrons onto oxygen-forming free radicals, resulting in hydrogen peroxide, hydroxyl radical, and superoxide production. The observation that mitochondrial targeting of catalase prolongs lifespan of mice and limits certain key indices of oxidant and mitochondrial cell damage indicates that free radical generation by mitochondria during "normal" life activities does generate "wear and tear" on mitochondria. In addition, it suggests that individuals or situations (such as diabetes) where there is excess generation of mitochondrial free radicals could be associated with considerably increased morbidity on that basis.

However, it is important to keep in mind the important role of ROS as mediators of signal transduction processes which contribute to homeostatic and protective mechanisms. At this point, experiments with catalase targeted to...  Read more


  Comment by:  Shaharyar Khan
Submitted 5 May 2005  |  Permalink Posted 5 May 2005

Aging, including age-related disease, is currently postulated to be the outcome of a large number of disparate influences. Based on the analysis of familial models of late-onset diseases such as Alzheimer’s, a number of biochemical processes, such as protein folding, posttranslational processing, protein degradation, and accumulation of toxic products (amyloid, synuclein, AGEs, lipofuscin) are believed to be involved. In most of these phenomena, reactive oxygen species (ROS) play an important role prompting many to hypothesize that ROS generation and damage to cellular constituents is the primary agent in aging, if not entirely etiological. ROS are generated in various cellular compartments and exert their immediate effects in close proximity to the site of their production. As such, many have hypothesized that ROS generation by, and damage to, these compartments enables a vicious cycle where free-radicals generated by the cellular constituents cause local damage, further increasing ROS production.

Unfortunately, tests of the free-radical theory of aging have provided...  Read more

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