Resistance to Ca2+-induced opening of the permeability transition pore differs in mitochondria from glycolytic and oxidative muscles
Male
0301 basic medicine
Time Factors
Mitochondrial Permeability Transition Pore
Cell Respiration
In Vitro Techniques
Mitochondrial Membrane Transport Proteins
Oxidative Phosphorylation
Mitochondria, Muscle
Rats
Mitochondrial Proteins
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
03 medical and health sciences
Muscle Fibers, Slow-Twitch
Phenotype
Muscle Fibers, Fast-Twitch
Animals
Calcium Signaling
Muscle, Skeletal
Reactive Oxygen Species
Glycolysis
DOI:
10.1152/ajpregu.90357.2008
Publication Date:
2008-05-22T01:09:46Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
This study determined whether susceptibility to opening of the permeability transition pore (PTP) varies according to muscle phenotype represented by the slow oxidative soleus (Sol) and superficial white gastrocnemius (WG). Threshold for Ca2+-induced mitochondrial Ca2+ release following PTP opening was determined with a novel approach using permeabilized ghost myofibers. Threshold values for PTP opening were approximately threefold higher in fibers from WG compared with those from Sol (124 ± 47 vs. 30.4 ± 6.8 pmol Ca2+/mU citrate synthase). A similar phenomenon was also observed in isolated mitochondria (threshold: 121 ± 60 vs. 40 ± 10 nmol Ca2+/mg protein in WG and Sol), indicating that this was linked to differences in mitochondrial factors between the two muscles. The resistance of WG fibers to PTP opening was not related to the expression of putative protein modulators (cyclophilin D, adenylate nucleotide translocator-1, and voltage-dependent anion channels) or to difference in respiratory properties and occurred despite the fact that production of reactive oxygen species, which promote pore opening, was higher than in the Sol. However, endogenous matrix Ca2+ measured in mitochondria isolated under resting baseline conditions was approximately twofold lower in the WG than in the Sol (56 ± 4 vs. 111 ± 11 nmol/mg protein), which significantly accounted for the resistance of WG. Together, these results reveal fiber type differences in the sensitivity to Ca2+-induced PTP opening, which may constitute a physiological mechanism to adapt mitochondria to the differences in Ca2+ dynamics between fiber types.
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