4.6 Article

Age decreases mitochondrial motility and increases mitochondrial size in vascular smooth muscle

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
Volume 594, Issue 15, Pages 4283-4295

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/JP271942

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust [092292/Z/10/Z]
  2. British Heart Foundation [PG/11/70/29086]
  3. Wellcome Trust [092292/Z/10/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust
  4. British Heart Foundation [PG/11/70/29086] Funding Source: researchfish

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Mitochondrial function, motility and architecture are each central to cell function. Age-associated mitochondrial dysfunction may contribute to vascular disease. However, mitochondrial changes in ageing remain ill-defined because of the challenges of imaging in native cells. We determined the structure of mitochondria in live native cells, demarcating boundaries of individual organelles by inducing stochastic 'flickers' of membrane potential, recorded as fluctuations in potentiometric fluorophore intensity (flicker-assisted localization microscopy; FaLM). In freshly-isolated myocytes from rat cerebral resistance arteries, FaLM showed a range of mitochondrial X-Y areas in both young adult (3 months; 0.05-6.58 mu m(2)) and aged rats (18 months; 0.05-13.4 mu m(2)). In cells from young animals, most mitochondria were small (mode area 0.051 mu m(2)) compared to aged animals (0.710 mu m(2)). Cells from older animals contained a sub-population of highly-elongated mitochondria (5.3% were > 2 mu m long, 4.2% had a length: width ratio > 3) that was rare in younger animals (0.15% of mitochondria > 2 mu m long, 0.4% had length: width ratio > 3). The extent of mitochondrial motility also varied. 1/811 mitochondria observed moved slightly (similar to 0.5 mu m) in myocytes from older animals, whereas, in the younger animals, directed and Brownian-like motility occurred regularly (215 of 1135 mitochondria moved within 10 min, up to distance of 12 mu m). Mitochondria positioned closer to the cell periphery showed a greater tendency to move. In conclusion, cerebral vascular myocytes from young rats contained small, motile mitochondria. In aged rats, mitochondria were larger, immobile and could be highly-elongated. These age-associated alterations in mitochondrial behaviour may contribute to alterations in cell signalling, energy supply or the onset of proliferation.

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