Abstract

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) impacts more than 25 million Americans and is associated with higher risk of all‐cause and cardiovascular mortality. Impaired kidney function leads to retention of metabolic waste products, termed uremic toxins, that negatively impact skeletal muscle resulting in increased fatigue, weakness, and muscle atrophy. Previous evidence has implicated mitochondria within the skeletal muscle as a primary mediator of muscle dysfunction in CKD, yet the underlying mechanisms are unknown. Therefore, the purpose of this study was to define the impact of uremic toxins on mitochondrial energetics. Skeletal muscle mitochondria were isolated from healthy C57BL/6N mice and exposed to vehicle (DMSO) or varying doses of the following uremic toxins: indoxyl sulfate, indole‐3‐acetic‐acid, L‐kynurenine, kynurenic acid, and methylguanidine. We employed a comprehensive mitochondrial phenotyping platform that included assessments of mitochondrial OXPHOS conductance across several levels of energy demand, hydrogen peroxide production (JH2O2), and dehydrogenase flux (using NADH autofluorescence). Exposure to uremic toxins resulted in a dose‐dependent decrease in OXPHOS conductance for all toxins, with 100nM exposure resulting in an average decrease of ~22% supported by pyruvate/malate (all P<0.05, n= 5–6/group). Uremic toxins did not decrease pyruvate dehydrogenase activity even at millimolar concentrations (all P>0.64), suggesting the decreased OXPHOS conductance occurs downstream of matrix dehydrogenases. Consistent with decreased OXPHOS conductance, uremic toxins dose‐dependently increased JH2O2 by 2–5‐fold (all P<0.01, n=4/group). These findings provide direct evidence that uremic toxins negatively impact skeletal muscle mitochondrial energetics, resulting in decreased energy transfer. Impaired mitochondrial energetics appears to be mediated downstream of matrix dehydrogenases, through either direct interaction within the electron transport system or ATP synthase.Support or Funding InformationPartially supported by AHA Grant 18CDA34110044 to TERThis abstract is from the Experimental Biology 2019 Meeting. There is no full text article associated with this abstract published in The FASEB Journal.

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