Title: Cardiac mitochondrial disruption in response to hypothermia and rewarming (864.1)
Abstract:Recovery from accidental hypothermia followed by rewarming (H/R) is often unsuccessful due to heart failure. Although the causes for H/R‐induced heart failure remain elusive, studies at the cellular l...Recovery from accidental hypothermia followed by rewarming (H/R) is often unsuccessful due to heart failure. Although the causes for H/R‐induced heart failure remain elusive, studies at the cellular level suggest alterations in both cytoplasmic and mitochondrial Ca 2+ regulation. We hypothesize that H/R is associated with mitochondrial Ca 2+ overload, which leads to: 1) excessive reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, 2) mitochondrial membrane depolarization, and 3) mitochondrial cytochrome c release. To test this hypothesis, isolated cardiomyocytes from adult male Sprague‐Dawley rats were subjected to an in vitro H/R protocol (1 h cooling to 15 o C held for 30 min followed by 1 h rewarming to 37 o C). Cytoplasmic (CM‐H 2 DCFDA fluorescence) and mitochondrial (MitoSOX fluorescence) ROS generation increased during cooling and remained elevated throughout the H/R protocol. Mitochondrial membrane potential (TMRM fluorescence) depolarized during rewarming suggesting mitochondrial permeability transition pore opening. After rewarming, cytochrome c content (Western blot) in cytoplasmic to mitochondrial fractions increased indicating release. These results suggest that Ca 2+ overload associated with H/R induces ROS generation leading to mitochondrial disruption. Grant Funding Source : Supported by NIH Grant 5T32HL105355‐02 (GCS)Read More
Publication Year: 2014
Publication Date: 2014-04-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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Cited By Count: 1
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