Publication | Open Access
Fatty acid nitroalkenes induce resistance to ischemic cardiac injury by modulating mitochondrial respiration at complex II
34
Citations
45
References
2015
Year
Heart FailureLipid PeroxidationMetabolic RemodelingRedox BiologyFatty Acid NitroalkenesOxidative StressMitochondrial Redox ReactionsMetabolic SyndromeCardiac InjuryMetabolic SignalingHealth SciencesRedox SignalingBiochemistryReactive Oxygen SpecieMetabolomicsNitro-fatty AcidsPharmacologyComplex Ii-linked RespirationCardiovascular DiseaseMitochondrial FunctionPhysiologyMitochondrial RespirationMetabolismMedicineNitrosative Stress
Nitro-fatty acids (NO2-FA) are metabolic and inflammatory-derived electrophiles that mediate pleiotropic signaling actions. It was hypothesized that NO2-FA would impact mitochondrial redox reactions to induce tissue-protective metabolic shifts in cells. Nitro-oleic acid (OA-NO2) reversibly inhibited complex II-linked respiration in isolated rat heart mitochondria in a pH-dependent manner and suppressed superoxide formation. Nitroalkylation of Fp subunit was determined by BME capture and the site of modification by OA-NO2 defined by mass spectrometric analysis. These effects translated into reduced basal and maximal respiration and favored glycolytic metabolism in H9C2 cardiomyoblasts as assessed by extracellular H(+) and O2 flux analysis. The perfusion of NO2-FA induced acute cardioprotection in an isolated perfused heart ischemia/reperfusion (IR) model as evidenced by significantly higher rate-pressure products. Together these findings indicate that NO2-FA can promote cardioprotection by inducing a shift from respiration to glycolysis and suppressing reactive species formation in the post-ischemic interval.
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