Transgenic NADH dehydrogenase restores oxygen regulation of breathing in mitochondrial complex I-deficient mice
Blanca Jiménez-Gómez, Patricia Ortega‐Sáenz, Lin Gao, Patricia González‐Rodríguez, Paula García‐Flores, Navdeep S. Chandel, José López‐Barneo
Abstract
Abstract The hypoxic ventilatory response (HVR) is a life-saving reflex, triggered by the activation of chemoreceptor glomus cells in the carotid body (CB) connected with the brainstem respiratory center. The molecular mechanisms underlying glomus cell acute oxygen (O 2 ) sensing are unclear. Genetic disruption of mitochondrial complex I (MCI) selectively abolishes the HVR and glomus cell responsiveness to hypoxia. However, it is unknown what functions of MCI (metabolic, proton transport, or signaling) are essential for O 2 sensing. Here we show that transgenic mitochondrial expression of NDI1, a single-molecule yeast NADH/quinone oxidoreductase that does not directly contribute to proton pumping, fully recovers the HVR and glomus cell sensitivity to hypoxia in MCI-deficient mice. Therefore, maintenance of mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase activity and the electron transport chain are absolutely necessary for O 2 -dependent regulation of breathing. NDI1 expression also rescues other systemic defects caused by MCI deficiency. These data explain the role of MCI in acute O 2 sensing by arterial chemoreceptors and demonstrate the optimal recovery of complex organismal functions by gene therapy.