Abstract

The effects of environmental hypoxia on cardiac and skeletal muscle metabolism are dependent on the duration and severity of hypoxic exposure, though factors which dictate the nature of the metabolic response to hypoxia are poorly understood. We therefore set out to investigate the time-dependence of metabolic acclimatisation to hypoxia in rat cardiac and skeletal muscle. Rats were housed under normoxic conditions, or exposed to short-term (2 d) or sustained (14 d) hypoxia (10% O2), after which samples were obtained from the left ventricle of the heart and the soleus for assessment of metabolic regulation and mitochondrial function. Mass-corrected maximal oxidative phosphorylation was 20% lower in the left ventricle following sustained but not short-term hypoxia, though no change was observed in the soleus. After sustained hypoxia, the ratio of octanoyl carnitine- to pyruvate- supported respiration was 11% and 12% lower in the left ventricle and soleus, respectively, whilst hexokinase activity increased by 33% and 2.1-fold in these tissues. mRNA levels of PPARα targets fell after sustained hypoxia in both tissues, but those of PPARα remained unchanged. Despite decreased Ucp3 expression after short-term hypoxia, UCP3 protein levels and mitochondrial coupling remained unchanged. Protein carbonylation was 40% higher after short-term but not sustained hypoxic exposure in the left ventricle, but was unchanged in the soleus at both timepoints. Our findings therefore demonstrate that 14 days, but not 2 days, of hypoxia induces a loss of oxidative capacity in the left ventricle but not the soleus, and a substrate switch away from fatty acid oxidation in both tissues.

Highlights

  • The partial pressure of atmospheric O2 (PO2) is the driving force behind O2 delivery to respiring tissues, and O2 delivery may be compromised when atmospheric PO2 is low

  • The main finding of this study is that a substrate switch away from fatty acid oxidation towards glycolysis/pyruvate oxidation was observed in both the left ventricle and soleus following sustained but not short-term exposure to environmental hypoxia, with the ratio between oxidative phosphorylation supported by octanoyl carnitine vs. pyruvate decreased and hexokinase activity increased in both tissues

  • Our findings suggest that in both left ventricle and soleus, metabolism is re-programmed in response to sustained exposure to hypoxia to increase the capacity for anaerobic metabolism and lower that for fatty acid oxidation, which is less O2-efficient than glycolysis/pyruvate oxidation [32]

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Summary

Introduction

The partial pressure of atmospheric O2 (PO2) is the driving force behind O2 delivery to respiring tissues, and O2 delivery may be compromised when atmospheric PO2 is low. Mitochondrial Function in Hypoxic Heart and Soleus funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

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