AI Article Synopsis

  • Ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury in the heart becomes harmful when ischemic conditions last about 20 minutes or longer, and mitochondrial bound hexokinase II (mtHKII) plays a protective role against this injury.
  • A study investigated whether reducing mtHKII during a non-injurious I/R period could trigger the transition to injurious I/R, exploring potential causes such as increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) and changes in heart energetics.
  • Results showed that treatment with TAT-HKII, which detaches HKII from mitochondria, led to significant heart damage, marked by increased LDH release and decreased function recovery, alongside elevated ROS levels during ischemia and reperfusion.

Article Abstract

Ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) of the heart becomes injurious when duration of the ischemic insult exceeds a certain threshold (approximately ≥20 min). Mitochondrial bound hexokinase II (mtHKII) protects against I/R injury, with the amount of mtHKII correlating with injury. Here, we examine whether mtHKII can induce the transition from non-injurious to injurious I/R, by detaching HKII from mitochondria during a non-injurious I/R interval. Additionally, we examine possible underlying mechanisms (increased reactive oxygen species (ROS), increased oxygen consumption (MVO) and decreased cardiac energetics) associated with this transition. Langendorff perfused rat hearts were treated for 20 min with saline, TAT-only or 200 nM TAT-HKII, a peptide that translocates HKII from mitochondria. Then, hearts were exposed to non-injurious 15-min ischemia, followed by 30-min reperfusion. I/R injury was determined by necrosis (LDH release) and cardiac mechanical recovery. ROS were measured by DHE fluorescence. Changes in cardiac respiratory activity (cardiac MVO and efficiency and mitochondrial oxygen tension (mitoPO) using protoporphyrin IX) and cardiac energetics (ATP, PCr, ∆G) were determined following peptide treatment. When exposed to 15-min ischemia, control hearts had no necrosis and 85% recovery of function. Conversely, TAT-HKII treatment resulted in significant LDH release and reduced cardiac recovery (25%), indicating injurious I/R. This was associated with increased ROS during ischemia and reperfusion. TAT-HKII treatment reduced MVO and improved energetics (increased PCr) before ischemia, without affecting MVO/RPP ratio or mitoPO. In conclusion, a reduction in mtHKII turns non-injurious I/R into injurious I/R. Loss of mtHKII was associated with increased ROS during ischemia and reperfusion, but not with increased MVO or decreased cardiac energetics before damage occurs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5534207PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13105-017-0555-3DOI Listing

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