Altered skeletal muscle microtubule-mitochondrial VDAC2 binding is related to bioenergetic impairments after paclitaxel but not vinblastine chemotherapies.

Am J Physiol Cell Physiol

School of Kinesiology and Health Science, Muscle Health Research Centre, York University, Toronto, Ontario , Canada.

Published: March 2019

Microtubule-targeting chemotherapies are linked to impaired cellular metabolism, which may contribute to skeletal muscle dysfunction. However, the mechanisms by which metabolic homeostasis is perturbed remains unknown. Tubulin, the fundamental unit of microtubules, has been implicated in the regulation of mitochondrial-cytosolic ADP/ATP exchange through its interaction with the outer membrane voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC). Based on this model, we predicted that disrupting microtubule architecture with the stabilizer paclitaxel and destabilizer vinblastine would impair skeletal muscle mitochondrial bioenergetics. Here, we provide in vitro evidence of a direct interaction between both α-tubulin and βII-tubulin with VDAC2 in untreated single extensor digitorum longus (EDL) fibers. Paclitaxel increased both α- and βII-tubulin-VDAC2 interactions, whereas vinblastine had no effect. Utilizing a permeabilized muscle fiber bundle preparation that retains the cytoskeleton, paclitaxel treatment impaired the ability of ADP to attenuate HO emission, resulting in greater HO emission kinetics. Despite no effect on tubulin-VDAC2 binding, vinblastine still altered mitochondrial bioenergetics through a surprising increase in ADP-stimulated respiration while also impairing ADP suppression of HO and increasing mitochondrial susceptibility to calcium-induced formation of the proapoptotic permeability transition pore. Collectively, these results demonstrate that altering microtubule architecture with chemotherapeutics disrupts mitochondrial bioenergetics in EDL skeletal muscle. Specifically, microtubule stabilization increases HO emission by impairing ADP sensitivity in association with greater tubulin-VDAC binding. In contrast, decreasing microtubule abundance triggers a broad impairment of ADP's governance of respiration and HO emission as well as calcium retention capacity, albeit through an unknown mechanism.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6457100PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpcell.00384.2018DOI Listing

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