Skeletal muscle mitochondrial fragmentation and impaired bioenergetics from nutrient overload are prevented by carbon monoxide.
Abstract
Nutrient excess increases skeletal muscle oxidant production and mitochondrial fragmentation
that may result in impaired mitochondrial function, a hallmark of skeletal muscle
insulin resistance. This led us to explore whether an endogenous gas molecule, carbon
monoxide (CO), which is thought to prevent weight gain and metabolic dysfunction in
mice consuming high-fat diets, alters mitochondrial morphology and respiration in
C2C12 myoblasts exposed to high glucose (15.6 mM) and high fat (250 µM BSA-palmitate)
(HGHF). Also, skeletal muscle mitochondrial morphology, distribution, respiration,
and energy expenditure were examined in obese resistant (OR) and obese prone (OP)
rats that consumed a high-fat and high-sucrose diet for 10 wk with or without intermittent
low-dose inhaled CO and/or exercise training. In cells exposed to HGHF, superoxide
production, mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm), mitochondrial fission regulatory
protein dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1) and mitochondrial fragmentation increased,
while mitochondrial respiratory capacity was reduced. CO decreased HGHF-induced superoxide
production, Drp1 protein levels and mitochondrial fragmentation, maintained ΔΨm, and
increased mitochondrial respiratory capacity. In comparison with lean OR rats, OP
rats had smaller skeletal muscle mitochondria that contained disorganized cristae,
a normal mitochondrial distribution, but reduced citrate synthase protein expression,
normal respiratory responses, and a lower energy expenditure. The combination of inhaled
CO and exercise produced the greatest effect on mitochondrial morphology, increasing
ADP-stimulated respiration in the presence of pyruvate, and preventing a decline in
resting energy expenditure. These data support a therapeutic role for CO and exercise
in preserving mitochondrial morphology and respiration during metabolic overload.
Type
Journal articleSubject
Muscle, SkeletalMitochondria, Muscle
Myoblasts
Animals
Humans
Mice
Rats
Obesity
Weight Gain
Carbon Monoxide
Reactive Oxygen Species
Dynamins
Sucrose
Physical Conditioning, Animal
Energy Metabolism
Diet, High-Fat
Mitochondrial Dynamics
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24118Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1152/ajpcell.00016.2020Publication Info
Gasier, Heath G; Dohl, Jacob; Suliman, Hagir B; Piantadosi, Claude A; & Yu, Tianzheng (2020). Skeletal muscle mitochondrial fragmentation and impaired bioenergetics from nutrient
overload are prevented by carbon monoxide. American journal of physiology. Cell physiology, 319(4). pp. C746-C756. 10.1152/ajpcell.00016.2020. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/24118.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
Heath Gasier
Associate Professor in Anesthesiology
I am a physiologist who joined Duke University in 2019 after retiring from military
service. My research has focused on understanding how oxidant stress impacts cellular
and systems physiology. Initially, I studied in humans how hyperbaric oxygen (HBO2)
within the therapeutic range and high altitude influence nitric oxide production,
antioxidant defenses, tissue oxygenation and muscle performance. This work sparked
my interest in redox biology and led me to train under Dr. Claude A
Claude Anthony Piantadosi
Professor Emeritus of Medicine
Dr. Piantadosi's laboratory has special expertise in the pathogenic mechanisms of
acute organ failure, particularly acute lung injury (ALI), with an emphasis on the
molecular regulatory roles of the physiological gases— oxygen, carbon monoxide, and
nitric oxide— as they relate to the damage responses to acute inflammation. The basic
science focuses on oxidative processes and redox-regulation, especially the molecular
mechanisms by which reactive oxygen and nitrogen species transmit b
Hagir B. Suliman
Associate Professor in Anesthesiology
Dr. Suliman is an expert in the molecular and cell biology of mammalian diseases,
particularly in the molecular regulation of oxidant inflammatory responses in the
heart and lung. She has a strong interest and expertise in the transcriptional control
of cell metabolism, especially mitochondrial biogenesis and mitochondrial-mediated
apoptosis and necrosis. Her recent publications have focused on the redox-regulation
of nuclear transcription factors involved in both mitochondrial biogenesis and
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