Abstract
RationaleIschemic heart disease (IHD) is a leading cause of mortality. The most effective intervention for IHD is reperfusion, which ironically causes ischemia reperfusion (I/R) injury mainly due to oxidative stress-induced cardiomyocyte death. The exact mechanism and site of reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation during I/R injury remain elusive. ObjectiveWe aim to test the hypothesis that Complex I-mediated forward and reverse electron flows are the major source of ROS in I/R injury of the heart. Methods and resultsWe used a genetic model of mitochondrial Complex I deficiency, in which a Complex I assembling subunit, Ndufs4 was knocked out in the heart (Ndufs4H−/−). The Langendorff perfused Ndufs4H−/− hearts exhibited significantly reduced infarct size (45.3 ± 5.5% in wild type vs 20.9 ± 8.1% in Ndufs4H−/−), recovered contractile function, and maintained mitochondrial membrane potential after no flow ischemia and subsequent reperfusion. In cultured adult cardiomyocytes from Ndufs4H−/− mice, I/R mimetic treatments caused minimal cell death. Reintroducing Ndufs4 in Ndufs4H−/− cardiomyocytes abolished the protection. Mitochondrial NADH declined much slower in Ndufs4H−/− cardiomyocytes during reperfusion suggesting decreased forward electron flow. Mitochondrial flashes, a marker for mitochondrial respiration, were inhibited in Ndufs4H−/− cardiomyocytes at baseline and during I/R, which was accompanied by preserved aconitase activity suggesting lack of oxidative damage. Finally, pharmacological blockade of forward and reverse electron flow at Complex I inhibited I/R-induced cell death. ConclusionsThese results provide the first genetic evidence supporting the central role of mitochondrial Complex I in I/R injury of mouse heart. The study also suggests that both forward and reverse electron flows underlie oxidative cardiomyocyte death during reperfusion.
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