Abstract

Compensatory changes in energy expenditure occur in response to positive and negative energy balance, but the underlying mechanism remains unclear. Under low energy demand, the mitochondrial electron transport system is particularly sensitive to added energy supply (i.e. reductive stress), which exponentially increases the rate of H2O2 (JH2O2) production. H2O2 is reduced to H2O by electrons supplied by NADPH. NADP+ is reduced back to NADPH by activation of mitochondrial membrane potential-dependent nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase (NNT). The coupling of reductive stress-induced JH2O2 production to NNT-linked redox buffering circuits provides a potential means of integrating energy balance with energy expenditure. To test this hypothesis, energy supply was manipulated by varying flux rate through β-oxidation in muscle mitochondria minus/plus pharmacological or genetic inhibition of redox buffering circuits. Here we show during both non-ADP- and low-ADP-stimulated respiration that accelerating flux through β-oxidation generates a corresponding increase in mitochondrial JH2O2 production, that the majority (∼70-80%) of H2O2 produced is reduced to H2O by electrons drawn from redox buffering circuits supplied by NADPH, and that the rate of electron flux through redox buffering circuits is directly linked to changes in oxygen consumption mediated by NNT. These findings provide evidence that redox reactions within β-oxidation and the electron transport system serve as a barometer of substrate flux relative to demand, continuously adjusting JH2O2 production and, in turn, the rate at which energy is expended via NNT-mediated proton conductance. This variable flux through redox circuits provides a potential compensatory mechanism for fine-tuning energy expenditure to energy balance in real time.

Highlights

  • Body weight is remarkably stable in adults over long periods of time despite daily fluctuations in energy intake and expenditure [1]

  • To examine whether mitochondrial rate of hydrogen peroxide (JH2O2) emission may be coupled to compensatory changes in nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase (NNT)-mediated energy expenditure, JH2O2 emission was measured by Amplex Ultra Red in mitochondria isolated from hind limb skeletal muscle of C57BL/6N (B6N) mice

  • NNT driven by mitochondrial membrane potential (DCm) maintains the NADP1/NADPH redox couple at a more negative steady state (Eh = ;2415 mV), which in turn holds both GSSG/GSH and Trx2ox/ Trx2red in more reduced steady states [35]

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Summary

Introduction

Body weight is remarkably stable in adults over long periods of time despite daily fluctuations in energy intake and expenditure [1]. The dynamic equilibrium among opposing free energy driving forces across the inner mitochondrial membrane (i.e. DGredox – NAD1/NADH and FAD/FADH2, DGDCm – mitochondrial membrane potential, and DGATP – matrix [ATP]/[ADP]) provides a potential ideal mechanism for sensing cellular energy balance [8]. This is obvious with respect to energy demand, where an increase in free [ADP] (i.e. decrease in mitochondrial DGATP) generates a corresponding increase in ATP synthase activity, an increase in proton (H1) conductance, a decrease in DGDCm, and an increase in electron flow and oxygen consumption [9]. Purpose of the present study was to test this hypothesis by determining the extent to which flux rates through b-oxidation and the ETS during low rates of respiration influence overall/ site-specific H2O2 production rates and whether JH2O2 production is coupled to NNT-mediated energy-consuming redox buffering circuits

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