The core of nutritional science has long been the provision of macro- and micronutrients, the processes by which they are taken up by the body, the metabolic, molecular and cellular systems with which they are involved, and the consequences for the maintenance of health and the prevention of disease of either under- or overprovision. The macronutrients are customarily defined as encompassing proteins, carbohydrates and lipids, while micronutrients refer to the multiplicity of vitamins, minerals and trace elements that are required for normal physiological function. Perusal of any textbook of nutrition will show chapters devoted to each of these groups of nutrients. However, one major macronutrient that does not feature is O2 – other than indirectly in relation to energy expenditure and metabolic rate in the context of energy balance and substrate utilisation (respiratory quotient). Indeed, O2 may not even be listed in the index, reflecting the fact that many would not consider it to be a nutrient as such. This then raises the question of what is a nutrient?
The Oxford English Dictionary defines a nutrient as ‘a substance that provides nourishment for the maintenance of life and for growth’; other definitions include ‘any substance or matter that is needed for the life and growth of living things’ (Webster's). O2 is self-evidently an essential requirement for all aerobic organisms, and given such definitions it is unambiguously a nutrient. The explanation for why O2 is invariably ignored as a critical nutrient lies in the route by which it is obtained – nutrients are regarded as being delivered from the diet through the mouth and via the gastrointestinal tract. O2, in contrast, is procured by a distinctly different route – from the ambient air via the lungs in terrestrial vertebrates, and from the surrounding water through the gills in fish (Table 1).
This article considers O2 as a nutrient (macronutrient) and the similarities and dissimilarities that are evident in comparison with the recognised, classical nutrients.
Provision and delivery of oxygen
In mammals, and other higher animals, there is a requirement for what is in effect the continuous, or virtually continuous, delivery of O2. This contrasts with other nutrients, the provision of which is episodic, most mammals being ‘periodic feeders though constant metabolisers’. A relative lack of O2 occurs in specific situations, either continuously in the case of terrestrial species living at high altitudes, or acutely and temporarily such as with aquatic animals undergoing deep-sea dives. Even some terrestrial animals living at sea level may be periodically exposed to low levels of O2, such as the naked mole-rat in its underground burrows( Reference Park, Reznick and Peterson 1 ). When acute or chronic O2 deficiency is part of the ecological niche or environmental circumstances to which a species is customarily exposed, selective adaptations have evolved. For example, in the naked mole-rat resistance to near anoxic conditions is sustained by utilising fructose as a fuel in glycolysis, thereby bypassing the key regulatory glycolytic enzyme phosphofructokinase( Reference Park, Reznick and Peterson 1 ).
Once taken up by the lungs, O2 is distributed in essence immediately and directly to tissues and cells throughout the body, needing no prior processing before being made available. In contrast, the classical nutrients normally require release from the complex structures of the foods in which they are present, as well as processing to a form that can be transferred out of the interior of the gastrointestinal tract (as with polysaccharides and TAG). In addition, in many cases once food has been digested the nutrients released are transported from the gastrointestinal tract via substrate-specific transporters (e.g. Na+-dependent glucose transporter and amino acid transporters) rather than moving passively across cell membranes.
Following transfer from the lungs (or gills) into the circulation the handling of O2 becomes more similar to that of other nutrients. O2 is transported to tissues and cells by the specific Fe-containing metalloprotein, Hb, located in the cytoplasm of erythrocytes in vertebrates. This has parallels with the delivery of a number of other nutrients, such as lipids and retinol, to the sites where they are required. Not all nutrients are transferred directly to the site of action – many, including glucose (as glycogen), fatty acids (as TAG), and vitamins such as retinol and vitamin D, are first stored prior to being delivered to the sites where they are required – with the liver and white adipose tissue being key storage organs. O2 is stored to a limited extent in muscle, bound to myoglobin, for local use only within the tissue, and this is especially evident in marine mammals that undergo apnoea when diving( Reference Ordway and Garry 2 ).
Metabolic functions
Despite not being considered within the remit of nutritional science in whole-body terms, at a cellular level O2 is recognised as a critical factor without which respiration and other key metabolic processes cannot take place. Oxidative metabolism, particularly the catabolism of fatty acids and glucose with the production of ATP through oxidative phosphorylation and mitochondrial respiration, requires a continuous supply of O2. Metabolic pathways central to this include glycogenolysis, glycolysis, lipolysis and the citric acid cycle, and involve cytochrome enzyme systems within the mitochondria( Reference Frayn 3 ).
The number of mitochondria in a cell, and whether there is a highly developed cristae structure within these organelles, varies according to the extent to which each cell type undergoes oxidative metabolism and consumes O2. Brown adipocytes in rodents adapted to the cold, for example, have large numbers of mitochondria with densely packed cristae, reflecting the exceptionally high levels of fatty acid oxidation and O2 consumption needed for thermoregulatory heat production (thermogenesis)( Reference Cannon and Nedergaard 4 ).
Oxygen deficiency states
The complete absence of O2 leads to death within minutes in man and other mammals. In addition to environmental circumstances in which a relative lack of O2 occurs related to the ecological niche of a species, there are certain disease states, primarily lung diseases such as pulmonary fibrosis and emphysema, where the provision of O2 to the body as a whole is impaired( Reference Kulkarni, O'Reilly and Antony 5 ). There are also states of cyclic O2 lack, as in obstructive sleep apnoea, which is one of the disorders particularly associated with obesity( Reference Bonsignore, McNicholas and Montserrat 6 ). In each of these cases the overall availability of O2 is limited, though not necessarily to a specific tissue. O2 deficiency can be ameliorated, both acutely and chronically, whether in lung disorders such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or in medical emergencies, by increasing the provision through O2 therapy.
The O2 tension (pO2) of inspired air at sea level is 160 mmHg and in alveolar blood it is approximately 104 mmHg, while the general level of oxygenation in tissues is of the order of 40–50 mmHg( Reference Brahimi-Horn and Pouysségur 7 – Reference Trayhurn 9 ). However, some tissues have a markedly lower pO2, examples including the retina, thymus and spleen, with a pO2 of 2–25, 10 and 16 mmHg, respectively( Reference Brahimi-Horn and Pouysségur 7 – Reference Trayhurn 9 ).
As well as low levels of O2 being characteristic of certain tissues under normal circumstances, local deprivation also occurs in specific pathological situations. These include the site of wound healing, in the heart in ischaemic disease, in tumours, and in white adipose tissue depots in obesity( Reference Brahimi-Horn and Pouysségur 7 – Reference Semenza, Agani and Feldser 10 ). The pO2 of solid tumours can be so low that those cells at the centre may be effectively anoxic. In the case of white fat, a reduced pO2 has been documented in white adipose tissue depots of obese rodents( Reference Ye, Gao and Yin 11 – Reference Rausch, Weisberg and Vardhana 13 ), the pO2 being >3-fold lower than in lean animals( Reference Ye, Gao and Yin 11 , Reference Sun, Halberg and Khan 14 ). Adipose tissue hypoxia in obesity is considered in part to reflect the considerable size of enlarged white adipocytes in relation to the normal diffusion distance of O2 in tissues( Reference Trayhurn 9 , Reference Trayhurn and Wood 15 ). This hypoxic state is linked to inflammation and fibrosis, and is considered to be a key factor underlying the changes in adipose tissue function that lead to the development of the major obesity-associated diseases, particularly insulin resistance and the metabolic syndrome( Reference Trayhurn 9 , Reference Trayhurn and Wood 15 , Reference Halberg, Khan and Trujillo 16 ).
Metabolic and cellular adaptations to oxygen deficiency
Part of the response to a chronic deficiency of O2 in a tissue is the stimulation of angiogenesis in order to extend the vasculature. At the level of the cell, a local deficiency of O2 leads to extensive metabolic changes( Reference Brahimi-Horn and Pouysségur 7 , Reference Brahimi-Horn and Pouysségur 8 , Reference Semenza 17 , Reference Semenza 18 ) (Fig. 1). Glucose and lipid oxidation, oxidative phosphorylation and mitochondrial respiration fall, and there is a compensatory increase in substrate flux through anaerobic pathways( Reference Brahimi-Horn and Pouysségur 7 , Reference Brahimi-Horn and Pouysségur 8 , Reference Semenza 18 ). In particular, the rate of glycolysis is greatly increased with lactate being the end product rather than pyruvate( Reference Brahimi-Horn and Pouysségur 7 , Reference Brahimi-Horn and Pouysségur 8 , Reference Semenza 18 ); under aerobic conditions pyruvate is oxidised via acetyl CoA and the citric acid cycle. Elevated rates of glycolysis are driven by increases in glucose uptake through the recruitment of GLUT1, the basal facilitative transporter, and raised levels of key glycolytic enzymes( Reference Brahimi-Horn and Pouysségur 7 , Reference Brahimi-Horn and Pouysségur 8 ). Tumours have, of course, long been recognised to produce substantial quantities of lactate, reflecting their marked hypoxic state( Reference Brahimi-Horn and Pouysségur 7 , Reference Semenza 19 ). Similar observations have been made on white adipocytes maintained under hypoxic conditions( Reference Trayhurn 9 , Reference Trayhurn 20 ).
The range of metabolic changes resulting from low pO2 extends well beyond the augmentation of glycolysis. In the specific case of white adipose tissue, microarray studies have indicated that the expression of approximately 1300 genes is altered in adipocytes exposed to 1 % O2 (Fig. 1) compared with those incubated under ‘normoxic’ conditions (21 % O2)( Reference Mazzatti, Lim and O'Hara 21 ). In addition to glucose utilisation, lipolysis and lipid oxidation, the pathways and functions altered in fat cells in response to low pO2 include cell-to-cell signalling and interaction, amino acid metabolism, and cell death( Reference Mazzatti, Lim and O'Hara 21 ). This is reflected in changes in the amounts of encoded transporters, enzymes, and key proteins such as adipokines – including those associated with the inflammatory response( Reference Trayhurn 9 , Reference Trayhurn 20 ). Cells not only respond to major differences in pO2, but again, as illustrated in adipocytes, they appear to carefully titrate small variations in pO2 with alterations in gene expression and glucose utilisation( Reference Wood, Stezhka and Trayhurn 22 ).
The cellular sensing of O2 deficiency is initiated at the cell membrane primarily through K+ ion channels( Reference Kemp and Peers 23 ) and the intracellular response is transmitted by hypoxia-sensitive transcription factors which regulate the expression of hypoxia-sensitive genes( Reference Brahimi-Horn and Pouysségur 7 , Reference Brahimi-Horn and Pouysségur 8 , Reference Semenza 17 – Reference Semenza 19 ). The most important of these transcriptional signals are the hypoxia-inducible factors (HIF), particularly HIF-1 which is termed the ‘master regulator of O2 homeostasis’( Reference Semenza 18 ). HIF-1 consists of two subunits – HIF-1β, which is constitutively expressed, and HIF-1α which is continuously synthesised and degraded but is stabilised when pO2 is low, this enabling the formation of the functional transcription factor( Reference Brahimi-Horn and Pouysségur 8 , Reference Semenza 17 , Reference Semenza 18 ). The transcription of multiple genes is directly regulated by HIF-1, including GLUT1, glycolytic enzymes, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), angiopoietin-like protein-4 and the adipocyte hormone leptin( Reference Brahimi-Horn and Pouysségur 7 – Reference Trayhurn 9 , Reference Trayhurn 20 ). VEGF is, of course, a key angiogenic signal, the growth of the vasculature being central to the delivery of O2 as well as of other nutrients.
Coda
O2 has been a forgotten, or at the very least highly neglected, nutrient. It is absolutely critical for all aerobic animals, and for most higher species is required on a continuous basis. It is essential for cellular respiration and for a host of other metabolic processes. States of deficiency are recognised and can be ameliorated. Cells have the ability to adjust to acute or chronic changes in O2 availability, this involving alterations in the expression of a multiplicity of hypoxia-sensitive genes regulated by key transcription factors.
Despite the similarities between O2 and other nutrients, there are some differences beyond the route of delivery. There is no meaningful equivalent of the RDA, and in most circumstances O2 is both abundant and freely available, and requires no prior processing. In contrast to many other nutrients, excess is difficult to achieve though toxicity is evident in artificially induced hyperoxaemia. It is argued that O2 should be viewed as firmly residing within the purview of nutritional science.
Acknowledgements
I am grateful to Professor Jon Arch for his helpful comments on the manuscript. The author declares that there are no conflicts of interest with respect to this work and that it is not linked to any specific funding.