Vol. 283, Issue 2, H671-H679, August 2002
Increasing plasmalogen levels protects human endothelial
cells during hypoxia
Raphael A.
Zoeller1,
Todd
J.
Grazia2,
Peter
LaCamera2,
James
Park2,
Daniel
P.
Gaposchkin1, and
Harrison
W.
Farber2
1 Department of Physiology and Biophysics and
2 The Pulmonary Center, Boston University School of
Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts 02118
Supplementation of cultured human
pulmonary arterial endothelial cells (PAEC) with
sn-1-O-hexadecylglycerol (HG) resulted in an
approximately twofold increase in cellular levels of plasmalogens, a
subclass of phospholipids known to have antioxidant properties; this
was due, primarily, to a fourfold increase in the choline plasmalogens.
Exposure of unsupplemented human PAEC to hypoxia (PO2 = 20-25 mmHg) caused an increase
in cellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) over a period of 5 days with
a coincident decrease in viability. In contrast, HG-supplemented cells
survived for at least 2 wk under these conditions with no evidence of
increased ROS. Hypoxia resulted in a selective increase in the turnover of the plasmalogen plasmenylethanolamine. Human PAEC with elevated plasmalogen levels were also more resistant to
H2O2, hyperoxia, and the superoxide generator
plumbagin. This protection was seemingly specific to cellular stresses
in which significant ROS were generated because the sensitivity to
lethal heat shock or glucose deprivation was not altered in HG-treated
human PAEC. HG, by itself, was not sufficient for protection; HG
supplementation of bovine PAEC had no effect upon plasmalogen levels
and did not rescue these cells from the cytotoxic effects of hypoxia.
This is the initial demonstration that plasmalogen content can be
substantially enhanced in a normal cell. These data also demonstrate
that HG can protect cells during hypoxia and other ROS-mediated stress,
likely due to the resulting increase in these antioxidant phospholipids.
sn-1-hexadecylglycerol; antioxidant; hyperoxia; heat
shock; glucose deprivation; reactive oxygen species