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Diabetes Increases the Vulnerability of the Cardiac Mitochondrial Network to Criticality

Authors :
Felix T. Kurz
Djahida Bedja
Miguel A. Aon
Johann M E Jende
Martin Bendszus
Larissa Vetter
Brian O'Rourke
Nazareno Paolocci
Antonis A. Armoundas
Steven J Sollot
Sonia Cortassa
Source :
Frontiers in Physiology, Vol 11 (2020), Frontiers in Physiology
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2020.

Abstract

Mitochondrial criticality describes a state in which the mitochondrial cardiac network under intense oxidative stress becomes very sensitive to small perturbations, leading from local to cell-wide depolarization and synchronized oscillations that may escalate to the myocardial syncytium generating arrhythmias. Herein, we describe the occurrence of mitochondrial criticality in the chronic setting of a metabolic disorder, type 1 diabetes (T1DM), using a streptozotocin (STZ)-treated guinea pig (GP) animal model. Using wavelet analysis of mitochondrial networks from two-photon microscopy imaging of cardiac myocytes loaded with a fluorescent probe of the mitochondrial membrane potential, we show that cardiomyocytes from T1DM GPs are closer to criticality, making them more vulnerable to cell-wide mitochondrial oscillations as can be judged by the latency period to trigger oscillations after a laser flash perturbation, and their propensity to oscillate. Insulin treatment of T1DM GPs rescued cardiac myocytes to sham control levels of susceptibility, a protective condition that could also be attained with interventions leading to improvement of the cellular redox environment such as preincubation of diabetic cardiac myocytes with the lipid palmitate or a cell-permeable form of glutathione, in the presence of glucose.

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....83bbac81ee0afa3abff9e952cd4de49f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2020.00175/full