The aim of this study was to investigate the mechanism of cellular regulation of mitochondrial respiration in permeabilized cardiac cells with clearly different structural organization: (i) in isolated rat cardiomyocytes with very regular mitochondrial arrangement, (ii) in HL-1 cells from mouse heart, and (iii) in non-beating (NB HL-1 cells) without sarcomeres with irregular and dynamic filamentous mitochondrial network. We found striking differences in the kinetics of respiration regulation by exogenous ADP between these cells: the apparent Km for exogenous ADP was by more than order of magnitude (14 times) lower in the permeabilized non-beating NB HL-1 cells without sarcomeres (25+/-4 microM) and seven times lower in normally cultured HL-1 cells (47+/-15 microM) than in permeabilized primary cardiomyocytes (360+/-51 microM). In the latter cells, treatment with trypsin resulted in dramatic changes in intracellular structure that were associated with 3-fold decrease in apparent Km for ADP in regulation of respiration. In contrast to permeabilized cardiomyocytes, in NB HL-1 cells creatine kinase activity was low and the endogenous ADP fluxes from MgATPases recorded spectrophotometrically by the coupled enzyme assay were not reduced after activation of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation by the addition of mitochondrial substrates, showing the absence of ADP channelling in the NB HL-1 cells. While in the permeabilized cardiomyocytes creatine strongly activated mitochondrial respiration even in the presence of powerful competing pyruvate kinase-phosphoenolpyruvate system, in the NB HL-1 cells the stimulatory effect of creatine was not significant. The results of this study show that in normal adult cardiomyocytes and HL-1 cells intracellular local restrictions of diffusion of adenine nucleotides and metabolic feedback regulation of respiration via phosphotransfer networks are different, most probably related to differences in structural organization of these cells.
The arrangement and movement of mitochondria were quantitatively studied in adult rat cardiomyocytes and in cultured continuously dividing non beating (NB) HL-1 cells with differentiated cardiac phenotype. Mitochondria were stained with MitoTracker Green and studied by fluorescent confocal microscopy. High speed scanning (one image every 400 ms) revealed very rapid fluctuation of positions of fluorescence centers of mitochondria in adult cardiomyocytes. These fluctuations followed the pattern of random walk movement within the limits of the internal space of mitochondria, probably due to transitions between condensed and orthodox configurational states of matrix and inner membrane. Mitochondrial fusion or fission was seen only in NB HL-1 cells but not in adult cardiomyocytes. In NB HL-1 cells, mitochondria were arranged as a dense tubular network, in permanent fusion, fission and high velocity displacements of approximately 90 nm/s. The differences observed in mitochondrial dynamics are related to specific structural organization and mitochondria-cytoskeleton interactions in these cells.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.