4.7 Article

Transient complex I inhibition at theLE onset of reperfusion by extracellular acidification decreases cardiac injury

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-CELL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 306, Issue 12, Pages C1142-C1153

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpcell.00241.2013

Keywords

mitochondrial permeability transition pore; reactive oxygen species; cytochrome c; ischemia

Funding

  1. Office of Research and Development, Medical Research Service, Department of Veterans Affairs
  2. Scientist Development Grant from the American Heart Association [11SDG5120011]
  3. Program Project from the National Institutes of Health [2PO1-AG-15885]
  4. Pauley Heart Center, Virginia Commonwealth University

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A reversible inhibition of mitochondrial respiration by complex I inhibition at the onset of reperfusion decreases injury in buffer-perfused hearts. Administration of acidic reperfusate for a brief period at reperfusion decreases cardiac injury. We asked if acidification treatment decreased cardiac injury during reperfusion by inhibiting complex I. Exposure of isolated mouse heart mitochondria to acidic buffer decreased the complex I substrate-stimulated respiration, whereas respiration with complex II substrates was unaltered. Evidence of the rapid and reversible inhibition of complex I by an acidic environment was obtained at the level of isolated complex, intact mitochondria and in situ mitochondria in digitonin-permeabilized cardiac myocytes. Moreover, ischemia-damaged complex I was also reversibly inhibited by an acidic environment. In the buffer-perfused mouse heart, reperfusion with pH 6.6 buffer for the initial 5 min decreased infarction. Compared with untreated hearts, acidification treatment markedly decreased the mitochondrial generation of reactive oxygen species and improved mitochondrial calcium retention capacity and inner mitochondrial membrane integrity. The decrease in infarct size achieved by acidic reperfusion approximates the reduction obtained by a reversible, partial blockade of complex I at reperfusion. Extracellular acidification decreases cardiac injury during reperfusion in part via the transient and reversible inhibition of complex I, leading to a reduction of oxyradical generation accompanied by a decreased susceptibility to mitochondrial permeability transition during early reperfusion.

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