4.5 Article

Mitochondrial genetic background modulates bioenergetics and susceptibility to acute cardiac volume overload

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 455, Issue -, Pages 157-167

Publisher

PORTLAND PRESS LTD
DOI: 10.1042/BJ20130029

Keywords

bioenergetics; disease susceptibility; mitochondria; mtDNA; oxidative stress

Funding

  1. National Institutes for Health [RO1 94518, RO1 103859]
  2. National Foundation for Cancer Research
  3. Susan G. Komen for the Cure [SAC111370]
  4. U.S. Army Medical Research & Material Command [W81XWH-07-1-0540d]
  5. University of Alabama at Birmingham Comprehensive Cancer Center [CA013148]
  6. National Institutes of Health [RO1 HL109785, P30 CA13148, P30 AR048311, P30 DK074038, P30 DK05336, P60 DK079626]
  7. a National Institutes of Health predoctoral training programme in cardiovascular pathophysiology [T32 HL007918]
  8. American Heart Association [09PRE2240046, 11PRE7650033]
  9. Diabetes Research Center Bioanalytical Redox Biology Core [P60 DK079626]

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Dysfunctional bioenergetics has emerged as a key feature in many chronic pathologies such as diabetes and cardiovascular disease. This has led to the mitochondrial paradigm in which it has been proposed that mtDNA sequence variation contributes to disease susceptibility. In the present study we show a novel animal model of mtDNA polymorphisms, the MNX (mitochondrial nuclear exchange) mouse, in which the mtDNA from the C3H/HeN mouse has been inserted on to the C57/BL6 nuclear background and vice versa to test this concept. Our data show a major contribution of the C57/BL6 mtDNA to the susceptibility to the pathological stress of cardiac volume overload which is independent of the nuclear background. Mitochondria harbouring the C57/BL6J mtDNA generate more ROS (reactive oxygen species) and have a higher mitochondrial membrane potential relative to those with C3H/HeN mtDNA, independent of nuclear background. We propose this is the primary mechanism associated with increased bioenergetic dysfunction in response to volume overload. In summary, these studies support the 'mitochondrial paradigm' for the development of disease susceptibility, and show that the mtDNA modulates cellular bioenergetics, mitochondrial ROS generation and susceptibility to cardiac stress.

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