Flight & Brains, Feathers & Hair
June 03, 2020
Adaptation to flight has a big impact on antioxidant defenses; recently this paper came up in my feed:

Adaptation of the master antioxidant response connects metabolism, lifespan and feather development pathways in birds [2020] - https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-020-16129-4

“Birds (Aves) display high metabolic rates and oxygen consumption relative to mammals, increasing reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation. Although excess ROS reduces lifespan by causing extensive cellular dysfunction and damage, birds are remarkably long-lived. We address this paradox by identifying the constitutive activation of the NRF2 master antioxidant response in Neoaves (~95% of bird species), providing an adaptive mechanism capable of counterbalancing high ROS levels. We demonstrate that a KEAP1 mutation in the Neoavian ancestor disrupted the repression of NRF2 by KEAP1, leading to constitutive NRF2 activity and decreased oxidative stress in wild Neoaves tissues and cells. Our evidence suggests this ancient mutation induced a compensatory program in NRF2-target genes with functions beyond redox regulation—including feather development—while enabling significant metabolic rate increases that avoid trade-offs with lifespan. The strategy of NRF2 activation sought by intense clinical investigation therefore appears to have also unlocked a massively successful evolutionary trajectory.

The physiological risks of constitutive NRF2 activation due to loss of KEAP1 binding have been demonstrated in vivo through KEAP1 knockout mice, which die from starvation shortly after birth from hyperkeratosis of the gastrointestinal tract, likely through overexpression of α-keratins and loricrins in squamous cells (ref. 38; Fig. 4c). In addition to α-keratins, avian skin keratinocytes also express β-keratin genes, which combine with α-keratins to form avian skin appendages (feathers, scales, claws, beaks; ref. 3). ...

This strongly suggests that the NRF2-mediated regulation of β-keratins we detected in Chicken skin has been compensated for by the loss of AREs and downregulation of ARE binding by NRF2 at Neoaves β-keratin loci. This pattern closely mirrors the loss of NRF2-mediated ARE-regulation in Neoaves GSTA2 (Fig. 4b). Together these analyses provide in vivo evidence that the evolution of NRF2-associated feather development genes may have been shaped by the constitutive activation of NRF2 in Neoaves.”

This reminded me of some work on the evolution of large brain size in humans & loss of body hair:

Hair for brain trade-off, a metabolic bypass for encephalization [2014] - https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4190188/

“Hair loss in humans is perplexing and raises many hypothetical explanations. This paper suggests that hair loss in humans is metabolically related to encephalization; and that hair covered hominids would have been unable to evolve large brains because of a dietary restriction of several amino acids which are essential for hair and brain development. We use simulations to imply that hair loss must have preceded increase in brain size & volume. In this respect we see hair loss as a major force in human evolution. We assume that hair reduction required favorable climatic conditions and must have been quick. Using evolutionary and ecological time scales, we pinpoint hair loss to a period around 2.2-2.4 million years ago. The dating is further supported by a rapid selection at that time of the sialic acid deletion mutation which may have protected growing human brains against calcium ion flux. In summary we view encephalization, in part, as a metabolic trade-off between hair and brain. Other biochemical changes may have intervened in the process too; and the deletion mutation of sialic acid hydroxylation may have been involved as well.

Human hair is composed of about 17% cysteine, a sulphuric amino acid noted for its ability to add rigidity to biological tissue (Table 3).”

Cysteine is also a major component of glutathione and a rate limiter for its synthesis; glutathione production is regulated through Nrf2. The Dror & Hopp 2014 paper mentions glutathione briefly; if the theory presented is correct, the increased need for glutathione synthesis is likely the major driver. In short, humans may have lost their body hair because of the increased demand for cysteine to produce glutathione which is needed to manage oxidative stress in the brain.

Birds upregulated glutathione synthesis by constitutive upregulation of Nrf2 and also avoided the problem of hyperkeratosis through downregulation of ARE binding by NRF2 at β-keratin loci. They have more glutathione, still have all their feathers, and no hyperkeratosis.

It is possible humans lost hair first, which freed up cysteine to be used for glutathione, which then allowed for encephalization.

#Birds #cysteine #evolution #flight #HumanEvolution #OxidativeStress #KEAP1 #Nrf2

Adaptation of the master antioxidant response connects metabolism, lifespan and feather development pathways in birds - Nature Communications

Fast metabolisms tend to shorten lifespans by increasing oxidative damage. This study identifies a gene mutation that keeps a key antioxidant response active, possibly allowing Neoaves bird species to avoid the tradeoff between rapid metabolism and longevity that challenges most mammals, including humans.

Nature

@ScienceScholar

This is really interesting, especially that there a sex difference.

I'd like to write something about why, but am unable to do so at present.

Here's a old blog post I wrote on the topic of cysteine in birds and humans:

Flight & Brains, Feathers & Hair
June 03, 2020
https://rhyobrain.blogspot.com/2020/06/flight-brains-feathers-hair.html

#cysteine #Nrf2 #HumanEvolution #Birds #glutathione #OxidativeStress

Flight & Brains, Feathers & Hair

Sedanolide Activates KEAP1–NRF2 Pathway and Ameliorates Hydrogen Peroxide-Induced Apoptotic Cell Death. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms242216532 #Sedanolide #Are #Nrf2 #OxidativeStress #Apoptosis
Sedanolide Activates KEAP1–NRF2 Pathway and Ameliorates Hydrogen Peroxide-Induced Apoptotic Cell Death

Sedanolide is a bioactive compound with anti-inflammatory and antitumor activities. Although it has been recently suggested that sedanolide activates the nuclear factor E2-related factor 2 (NRF2) pathway, there is little research on its effects on cellular resistance to oxidative stress. The objective of the present study was to investigate the function of sedanolide in suppressing hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)-induced oxidative damage and the underlying molecular mechanisms in human hepatoblastoma cell line HepG2 cells. We found that sedanolide activated the antioxidant response element (ARE)-dependent transcription mediated by the nuclear translocation of NRF2. Pathway enrichment analysis of RNA sequencing data revealed that sedanolide upregulated the transcription of antioxidant enzymes involved in the NRF2 pathway and glutathione metabolism. Then, we further investigated whether sedanolide exerts cytoprotective effects against H2O2-induced cell death. We showed that sedanolide significantly attenuated cytosolic and mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation induced by exposure to H2O2. Furthermore, we demonstrated that pretreatment with sedanolide conferred a significant cytoprotective effect against H2O2-induced cell death probably due to preventing the decrease in the mitochondrial membrane potential and the increase in caspase-3/7 activity. Our study demonstrated that sedanolide enhanced cellular resistance to oxidative damage via the activation of the Kelch-like ECH-associated protein 1 (KEAP1)–NRF2 pathway.

MDPI