Mitochondrial respiration in rats during hypothermia resulting from central drug administration.

J Comp Physiol B

Laboratory of Autonomic and Behavioral Physiology, Department of Biomedical and Neuromotor Sciences (DIBINEM), University of Bologna, Via Irnerio, 48, 40126, Bologna, Italy.

Published: March 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study explores methods to induce hypothermia resembling natural torpor in rats through pharmacological manipulation targeting the central nervous system, with the aim of applying these findings in medical and non-medical fields.
  • - Researchers analyzed mitochondrial respiration rates in the liver and kidneys of rats and compared them with a known model of torpor in mice, finding that liver mitochondria in rats remained active despite hypothermic conditions.
  • - The results suggest that while rats did not show significant changes in liver respiration rates like mice, their liver mitochondria may still be prepared to rapidly produce energy, offering potential insights for future human applications.

Article Abstract

The ability to induce a hypothermia resembling that of natural torpor would be greatly beneficial in medical and non-medical fields. At present, two procedures based on central nervous pharmacological manipulation have been shown to be effective in bringing core body temperature well below 30 °C in the rat, a non-hibernator: the first, based on the inhibition of a key relay in the central thermoregulatory pathway, the other, based on the activation of central adenosine A1 receptors. Although the role of mitochondria in the activation and maintenance of torpor has been extensively studied, no data are available for centrally induced hypothermia in non-hibernators. Thus, in the present work the respiration rate of mitochondria in the liver and in the kidney of rats following the aforementioned hypothermia-inducing treatments was studied. Moreover, to have an internal control, the same parameters were assessed in a well-consolidated model, i.e., mice during fasting-induced torpor. Our results show that state 3 respiration rate, which significantly decreased in the liver of mice, was unchanged in rats. An increase of state 4 respiration rate was observed in both species, although it was not statistically significant in rats under central adenosine stimulation. Also, a significant decrease of the respiratory control ratio was detected in both species. Finally, no effects were detected in kidney mitochondria in both species. Overall, in these hypothermic conditions liver mitochondria of rats remained active and apparently ready to be re-activated to produce energy and warm up the cells. These findings can be interpreted as encouraging in view of the finalization of a translational approach to humans.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00360-021-01421-6DOI Listing

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