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Calcium Overload and Mitochondrial Metabolism

Journal

BIOMOLECULES
Volume 12, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biom12121891

Keywords

bioenergetics; calcium overload; mitochondria; mitochondrial ultrastructure; mitochondrial function; oxidative phosphorylation; mitochondrial ATP production; calcium phosphate; calcium precipitates

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Mitochondrial calcium plays a dual role, with low levels being essential for ATP production and high levels leading to mitochondrial dysfunction. In moderate amounts, calcium inhibits ATP synthesis. The mechanism of mitochondrial dysfunction during calcium overload remains unclear, but it may involve changes in mitochondrial ultrastructure and enzyme activity.
Mitochondria calcium is a double-edged sword. While low levels of calcium are essential to maintain optimal rates of ATP production, extreme levels of calcium overcoming the mitochondrial calcium retention capacity leads to loss of mitochondrial function. In moderate amounts, however, ATP synthesis rates are inhibited in a calcium-titratable manner. While the consequences of extreme calcium overload are well-known, the effects on mitochondrial function in the moderately loaded range remain enigmatic. These observations are associated with changes in the mitochondria ultrastructure and cristae network. The present mini review/perspective follows up on previous studies using well-established cryo-electron microscopy and poses an explanation for the observable depressed ATP synthesis rates in mitochondria during calcium-overloaded states. The results presented herein suggest that the inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation is not caused by a direct decoupling of energy metabolism via the opening of a calcium-sensitive, proteinaceous pore but rather a separate but related calcium-dependent phenomenon. Such inhibition during calcium-overloaded states points towards mitochondrial ultrastructural modifications, enzyme activity changes, or an interplay between both events.

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