Background Supplemental oxygenation of the standard hypothermic machine perfusion (HMP) circuit has the potential to invoke favorable changes in metabolism, optimizing cadaveric organs before transplantation. Methods Eight pairs of porcine kidneys underwent 18 hours of either oxygenated (HMP/O2) or aerated (HMP/Air) HMP in a paired donation after circulatory death model of transplantation. Circulating perfusion fluid was supplemented with the metabolic tracer universally labeled glucose. Perfusate, end-point renal cortex, and medulla samples underwent metabolomic analysis using 1-dimension and 2-dimension nuclear magnetic resonance experiments in addition to gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Analysis of 13C-labeled metabolic products was combined with adenosine nucleotide levels and differences in tissue architecture. Results Metabolomic analysis revealed significantly higher concentrations of universally labeled lactate in the cortex of HMP/Air versus HMP/O2 kidneys (0.056 mM vs 0.026 mM, P < 0.05). Conversely, newly synthesized [4,5-13C] glutamate concentrations were higher in the cortex of HMP/O2 kidneys inferring relative increases in tricarboxylic acid cycle activity versus HMP/Air kidneys (0.013 mmol/L vs 0.003 mmol/L, P < 0.05). This was associated with greater amounts of adenoside triphosphate in the cortex HMP/O2 versus HMP/Air kidneys (19.8 mmol/mg protein vs 2.8 mmol/mg protein, P < 0.05). Improved flow dynamics and favorable ultrastructural features were also observed in HMP/O2 kidneys. There were no differences in thiobarbituric acid reactive substances and reduced glutathione levels, tissue markers of oxidative stress, between groups. Conclusions The supplementation of perfusion fluid with high-concentration oxygen (95%) results in a greater degree of aerobic metabolism versus aeration (21%) in the nonphysiological environment of HMP, with reciprocal changes in adenoside triphosphate levels.
SummarySince the discovery of mutations in isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) in gliomas and other tumors, significant efforts have been made to gain a deeper understanding of the consequences of this oncogenic mutation. One aspect of the neomorphic function of the IDH1 R132H enzyme that has received less attention is the perturbation of cellular redox homeostasis. Here, we describe a biosynthetic pathway exhibited by cells expressing mutant IDH1. By virtue of a change in cellular redox homeostasis, IDH1-mutated cells synthesize excess glutamine-derived proline through enhanced activity of pyrroline 5-carboxylate reductase 1 (PYCR1), coupled to NADH oxidation. Enhanced proline biosynthesis partially uncouples the electron transport chain from tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle activity through the maintenance of a lower NADH/NAD+ ratio and subsequent reduction in oxygen consumption. Thus, we have uncovered a mechanism by which tumor cell survival may be promoted in conditions associated with perturbed redox homeostasis, as occurs in IDH1-mutated glioma.
Biological characterisation of membrane proteins lags behind that of soluble proteins. This reflects issues with the traditional use of detergents for extraction, as the surrounding lipids are generally lost, with adverse structural and functional consequences. In contrast, styrene maleic acid (SMA) copolymers offer a detergent-free method for biological membrane solubilisation to produce SMA-lipid particles (SMALPs) containing membrane proteins together with their surrounding lipid environment. We report the development of a reverse-phase LC-MS/MS method for bacterial phospholipids and the first comparison of the profiles of SMALP co-extracted phospholipids from three exemplar bacterial membrane proteins with different topographies: FtsA (associated membrane protein), ZipA (single transmembrane helix), and PgpB (integral membrane protein). The data showed that while SMA treatment per se did not preferentially extract specific phospholipids from the membrane, SMALP-extracted ZipA showed an enrichment in phosphatidylethanolamines and depletion in cardiolipins compared to the bulk membrane lipid. Comparison of the phospholipid profiles of the 3 SMALP-extracted proteins revealed distinct lipid compositions for each protein: ZipA and PgpB were similar, but in FtsA samples longer chain phosphatidylglycerols and phosphatidylethanolamines were more abundant. This method offers novel information on the phospholipid interactions of these membrane proteins.
Intracellular Na elevation in the heart is a hallmark of pathologies where both acute and chronic metabolic remodelling occurs. Here, we assess whether acute (75 μM ouabain 100 nM blebbistatin) or chronic myocardial Na i load (PLM 3SA mouse) are causally linked to metabolic remodelling and whether the failing heart shares a common Na-mediated metabolic 'fingerprint'. Control (PLM WT), transgenic (PLM 3SA), ouabain-treated and hypertrophied Langendorff-perfused mouse hearts are studied by 23 Na, 31 P, 13 C NMR followed by 1 H-NMR metabolomic profiling. Elevated Na i leads to common adaptive metabolic alterations preceding energetic impairment: a switch from fatty acid to carbohydrate metabolism and changes in steady-state metabolite concentrations (glycolytic, anaplerotic, Krebs cycle intermediates). Inhibition of mitochondrial Na/Ca exchanger by CGP37157 ameliorates the metabolic changes. In silico modelling indicates altered metabolic fluxes (Krebs cycle, fatty acid, carbohydrate, amino acid metabolism). Prevention of Na i overload or inhibition of Na/ Ca mito may be a new approach to ameliorate metabolic dysregulation in heart failure.
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