1. Disruption of mitochondrial bioenergetics and calcium homeostasis by phytanic acid in the heart: Potential relevance for the cardiomyopathy in Refsum disease.
- Author
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Zemniaçak ÂB, Roginski AC, Ribeiro RT, Bender JG, Marschner RA, Wajner SM, Wajner M, and Amaral AU
- Subjects
- Rats, Animals, Phytanic Acid pharmacology, Phytanic Acid metabolism, Calcium metabolism, Rats, Wistar, Energy Metabolism, Mitochondria, Heart metabolism, Fatty Acids metabolism, Mitochondrial Permeability Transition Pore metabolism, Homeostasis, Refsum Disease metabolism, Cardiomyopathies drug therapy, Cardiomyopathies metabolism
- Abstract
Refsum disease is an inherited peroxisomal disorder caused by severe deficiency of phytanoyl-CoA hydroxylase activity. Affected patients develop severe cardiomyopathy of poorly known pathogenesis that may lead to a fatal outcome. Since phytanic acid (Phyt) concentrations are highly increased in tissues of individuals with this disease, it is conceivable that this branched-chain fatty acid is cardiotoxic. The present study investigated whether Phyt (10-30 μM) could disturb important mitochondrial functions in rat heart mitochondria. We also determined the influence of Phyt (50-100 μM) on cell viability (MTT reduction) in cardiac cells (H9C2). Phyt markedly increased mitochondrial state 4 (resting) and decreased state 3 (ADP-stimulated) and uncoupled (CCCP-stimulated) respirations, besides reducing the respiratory control ratio, ATP synthesis and the activities of the respiratory chain complexes I-III, II, and II-III. This fatty acid also reduced mitochondrial membrane potential and induced swelling in mitochondria supplemented by exogenous Ca
2+ , which were prevented by cyclosporin A alone or combined with ADP, suggesting the involvement of the mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT) pore opening. Mitochondrial NAD(P)H content and Ca2+ retention capacity were also decreased by Phyt in the presence of Ca2+ . Finally, Phyt significantly reduced cellular viability (MTT reduction) in cultured cardiomyocytes. The present data indicate that Phyt, at concentrations found in the plasma of patients with Refsum disease, disrupts by multiple mechanisms mitochondrial bioenergetics and Ca2+ homeostasis, which could presumably be involved in the cardiomyopathy of this disease., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
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