AIF Overexpression Aggravates Oxidative Stress in Neonatal Male Mice After Hypoxia-Ischemia Injury.
Tao LiYanyan SunShan ZhangYiran XuKenan LiCuicui XieYong WangYafeng WangJing CaoXiaoyang WangJosef M PenningerGuido KroemerKlas BlomgrenChanglian ZhuPublished in: Molecular neurobiology (2022)
There are sex differences in the severity, mechanisms, and outcomes of neonatal hypoxia-ischemia (HI) brain injury, and apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) may play a critical role in this discrepancy. Based on previous findings that AIF overexpression aggravates neonatal HI brain injury, we further investigated potential sex differences in the severity and molecular mechanisms underlying the injury using mice that overexpress AIF from homozygous transgenes. We found that the male sex significantly aggravated AIF-driven brain damage, as indicated by the injury volume in the gray matter (2.25 times greater in males) and by the lost volume of subcortical white matter (1.71 greater in males) after HI. As compared to females, male mice exhibited more severe brain injury, correlating with reduced antioxidant capacities, more pronounced protein carbonylation and nitration, and increased neuronal cell death. Under physiological conditions (without HI), the doublecortin-positive area in the dentate gyrus of females was 1.15 times larger than in males, indicating that AIF upregulation effectively promoted neurogenesis in females in the long term. We also found that AIF stimulated carbohydrate metabolism in young males. Altogether, these findings corroborate earlier studies and further demonstrate that AIF is involved in oxidative stress, which contributes to the sex-specific differences observed in neonatal HI brain injury.
Keyphrases
- brain injury
- oxidative stress
- cerebral ischemia
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- white matter
- cell death
- cell proliferation
- diabetic rats
- dna damage
- cell cycle arrest
- induced apoptosis
- endothelial cells
- signaling pathway
- poor prognosis
- resting state
- atomic force microscopy
- functional connectivity
- mass spectrometry
- long non coding rna
- climate change
- skeletal muscle
- type diabetes
- weight loss
- insulin resistance
- single molecule
- glycemic control
- wild type