Mitochondrial mass imbalance is one of the key causes of cardiovascular dysfunction after hypoxia. The activation of dynamin-related protein 1 (Drp1), as well as its mitochondrial translocation, play important roles in the changes of both mitochondrial morphology and mitochondrial functions after hypoxia. However, in addition to mediating mitochondrial fission, whether Drp1 has other regulatory roles in mitochondrial homeostasis after mitochondrial translocation is unknown. In this study, we performed a series of interaction and colocalization assays and found that, after mitochondrial translocation, Drp1 may promote the excessive opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mPTP) after hypoxia. Firstly, mitochondrial Drp1 maximumly recognizes mPTP channels by binding Bcl-2-associated X protein (BAX) and a phosphate carrier protein (PiC) in the mPTP. Then, leucine-rich repeat serine/threonine-protein kinase 2 (LRRK2) is recruited, whose kinase activity is inhibited by direct binding with mitochondrial Drp1 after hypoxia. Subsequently, the mPTP-related protein hexokinase 2 (HK2) is inactivated at Thr-473 and dissociates from the mitochondrial membrane, ultimately causing structural disruption and overopening of mPTP, which aggravates mitochondrial and cellular dysfunction after hypoxia. Thus, our study interprets the dual direct regulation of mitochondrial Drp1 on mitochondrial morphology and functions after hypoxia and proposes a new mitochondrial fission-independent mechanism for the role of Drp1 after its translocation in hypoxic injury.
Introduction Vascular leakage plays a vital role in sepsis-induced multi-organ dysfunction. Currently, no specific measures are available for vascular leakage. Ferroptosis, as a recently recognized form of cell death, plays a crucial role in cell dysfunction. It is still unknown whether ferroptosis participates in the occurrence of organ dysfunction following sepsis. Our previous study showed that dexmedetomidine (Dex) could alleviate sepsis-induced organ dysfunction. However, whether the mechanism is related to ferroptosis is not clear. Methods The publicly available datasets of septic patients were reanalyzed, and septic models in vivo and vitro by cecal ligation and puncture and lipopolysaccharide-stimulated vascular endothelial cells (VECs) were applied. The occurrence of ferroptosis in septic patients and rats was observed, and the protective effects of Dex on ferroptosis, and related mechanisms on regulating metabolic reprogramming and mitochondrial fission were further studied. Results The transcriptomics data of patients from the GEO database showed that ferroptosis was closely related to sepsis. Sepsis induced significant ferroptosis in VECs by metabolomics analysis. The level of lipid peroxidation was increased in VECs, and the mitochondrial cristae was decreased after sepsis. Metabolomics analysis showed that Dex activated the pentose phosphate pathway and increased glutathione in VECs via up-regulation of G6PD expression. Dex could antagonize sepsis-induced the decrease in the level of Nrf2. The Nrf2 inhibitor reversed the protective effect of Dex on ferroptosis. Further study showed that Dex significantly alleviated sepsis-induced mitochondrial over-division, improved mitochondrial function, and decreased ROS, further inhibiting the ferroptosis of VECs. Dex alleviated the permeability of vessels by reducing ferroptosis and enhanced the intercellular junction of VECs. Conclusion Dex protects vascular leakage following sepsis by inhibiting ferroptosis. The mechanism is mainly related to metabolic reprogramming via Nrf2 up-regulation and inhibition of mitochondrial fission.
Introduction: Vasoconstriction is triggered by an increase in intracellular-free calcium concentration. Growing evidence indicates that contraction is also regulated by calcium-independent mechanisms involving RhoA-Rho kinase (ROCK), protein kinase C (PKC), and so on. In this study, we studied the changes of vascular reactivity as well as the underlying signaling pathways in aging spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs). Methods: The artery tension induced by α1-adrenergic receptor activator (α1-AR) phenylephrine (PE) was measured in the absence or presence of myosin light chain kinase (MLCK), PKC, and ROCK inhibitors. The α1-AR, PKC, ROCK, phosphorylation of myosin light chain (MLC), and PKC-potentiated phosphatase inhibitors of 17 kDa (CPI-17) of rat mesenteric arteries were analyzed at the mRNA level or protein level. Results: The vascular tension measurements showed that there was a significant increase in the mesenteric artery contraction induced by PE in old SHR. MLCK inhibitor ML-7 can similarly inhibit PE-induced vasoconstriction. PKC inhibitor GF109203X has the weakest inhibitory effect on PE-induced contraction in old SHR. At the presence of ROCK inhibitor H1152, PE-induced contraction was significantly reduced in young Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats, but this phenomenon disappeared in other rats. Furthermore, in old SHR the protein expression of α1-AR decreased and phosphorylation of MLC and CPI-17 were upregulated and MLC phosphatase (MLCP) activity was significantly lower. The expressions of PKC were upregulated in SHR and old rats. In addition, the expression of ROCK-1 was decreased and ROCK-2 was significantly upregulated with age in SHR. Conclusion: In aging hypertension, the expression/activity of PKC or ROCK-2/CPI-17 excessively increased, MLCP activity decreased and MLC phosphorylation enhanced, leading to increased α1-AR-induced vasoconstriction.
Sepsis-associated organ dysfunction plays a critical role in its high mortality, mainly in connection with mitochondrial dysfunction. Whether the inhibition of mitochondrial fission is beneficial to sepsis-related organ dysfunction and underlying mechanisms are unknown. Cecal ligation and puncture induced sepsis in rats and dynamic related protein 1 knockout mice, lipopolysaccharide-treated vascular smooth muscle cells and cardiomyocytes, were used to explore the effects of inhibition of mitochondrial fission and specific mechanisms. Our study showed that mitochondrial fission inhibitor Mdivi-1 could antagonize sepsis-induced organ dysfunction including heart, vascular smooth muscle, liver, kidney, and intestinal functions, and prolonged animal survival. The further study showed that mitochondrial functions such as mitochondrial membrane potential, adenosine-triphosphate contents, reactive oxygen species, superoxide dismutase and malonaldehyde were recovered after Mdivi-1 administration via improving mitochondrial morphology. And sepsis-induced inflammation and apoptosis in heart and vascular smooth muscle were alleviated through inhibition of mitochondrial fission and mitochondrial function improvement. The parameter trends in lipopolysaccharide-stimulated cardiomyocytes and vascular smooth muscle cells were similar in vivo. Dynamic related protein 1 knockout preserved sepsis-induced organ dysfunction, and the animal survival was prolonged. Taken together, this finding provides a novel effective candidate therapy for severe sepsis/septic shock and other critical clinical diseases.
Sepsis is a heterogeneous disease state triggered by an uncontrolled inflammatory host response with high mortality and morbidity in severely ill patients. Unfortunately, the treatment effectiveness varies among sepsis patients and the underlying mechanisms have yet to be elucidated. The present aim is to explore featured metabolism-related genes that may become the biomarkers in patients with sepsis. In this study, differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between sepsis and non-sepsis in whole blood samples were identified using two previously published datasets (GSE95233 and GSE54514). A total of 66 common DEGs were determined, namely, 52 upregulated and 14 downregulated DEGs. The Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA) results indicated that these DEGs participated in several metabolic processes including carbohydrate derivative, lipid, organic acid synthesis oxidation reduction, and small-molecule biosynthesis in patients with sepsis. Subsequently, a total of 8 hub genes were screened in the module with the highest score from the Cytoscape plugin cytoHubba. Further study showed that these hub DEGs may be robust markers for sepsis with high area under receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC). The diagnostic values of these hub genes were further validated in myocardial tissues of septic rats and normal controls by untargeted metabolomics analysis using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS). Immune cell infiltration analysis revealed that different infiltration patterns were mainly characterized by B cells, T cells, NK cells, monocytes, macrophages, dendritics, eosinophils, and neutrophils between sepsis patients and normal controls. This study indicates that metabolic hub genes may be hopeful biomarkers for prognosis prediction and precise treatment in sepsis patients.
Previous studies found that seawater immersion combined with hemorrhagic shock (SIHS) induced serious organ function disorder, and lethal triad was a critical sign. There were no effective treatments of SIHS. Fluid resuscitation was the initial measurement for early aid following hemorrhagic shock, while the proper fluid for SIHS is not clear. Effects of different osmotic pressures [lactated Ringer’s (LR) solution, 0.3% saline, 0.6% saline, and 0.9% normal saline] on the lethal triad, mitochondrial function, vital organ functions, and survival were observed following SIHS in rats. The results showed that SIHS led to an obvious lethal triad, which presented the decrease of the body temperature, acidosis, and coagulation functions disorder in rats. Fluid resuscitation with different osmotic pressures recovered the body temperature and corrected acidosis with different levels; effects of 0.6% normal saline were the best; especially for the coagulation function, 0.6% normal saline alleviated the lethal triad significantly. Further studies showed that SIHS resulted in the damage of the mitochondrial function of vital organs, the increase of the vascular permeability, and, at the same time, the organ function including cardiac, liver, and kidney was disordered. Conventional fluid such as LR or 0.9% normal saline could not improve the mitochondrial function and vascular leakage and alleviate the damage of the organ function. While moderate hypotonic fluid, the 0.6% normal saline, could lighten organ function damage via protecting mitochondrial function. The 0.6% normal saline increased the left ventricular fractional shortening and the left ventricular ejection fraction, and decreased the levels of aspartate transaminase, alanine transferase, blood urea nitrogen, and creatinine in the blood. The effects of fluids with different osmotic pressures on the mean arterial pressure (MAP) had a similar trend as above parameters. The survival results showed that the 0.6% normal saline group improved the survival rate and prolonged the survival time, the 72 h survival rate was 7/16, as compared with the LR group (3/16). The results indicate that appropriate hypotonic fluid is suitable after SIHS, which alleviates the lethal triad, protects the mitochondrial function and organ functions, and prolongs the survival time.
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