Cellular injury induced by reperfusion after myocardial ischemia is manifested by striking mitochondrial damage as well as other hallmarks such as contraction band necrosis. Calcium has been implicated as a mediator of irreversible cellular injury in several systems. To identify other potential mediators of the mitochondrial injury associated with reperfusion, interactions between inorganic phosphate, oxygen, and mitochondria harvested from rabbit hearts were evaluated in vitro. Mitochondria exhibited rapid inactivation of oxidative phosphorylation after preincubation at 25 degrees C when phosphate and oxygen were present. Inactivation was partially but not completely precluded by EDTA, EGTA, magnesium, diltiazem, or ruthenium red, results in concert with findings of others suggesting involvement of a deleterious influx of calcium into mitochondria; exogenous calcium enhanced inactivation. However, the present data indicate that inactivation is prevented by incubation of mitochondria in the absence of oxygen, and demonstrate for the first time that injury elicited by phosphate is dependent on oxygen at physiological concentrations either because calcium and/or phosphate influx is linked to aerobic metabolism or because oxygen exerts deleterious effects on mitochondria, which may render them particularly susceptible to calcium influx. Since intracellular inorganic phosphate concentration increases markedly with ischemia, reperfusion with oxygenated medium may paradoxically augment mitochondrial injury in this setting. Thus, in the presence of increased intracellular concentrations of calcium and phosphate induced by ischemia, subsequent reestablishment of physiological levels of intracellular oxygen tension may promote mitochondrial damage, which is known to increase with reperfusion.
L G Lange, M Hartman, B E Sobel
Title and authors | Publication | Year |
---|---|---|
PREFABL: predictors of failure of antibiotic locks for the treatment of catheter-related bacteraemia
AM Onder, A Billings, J Chandar, D Francoeur, N Simon, C Abitbol, G Zilleruelo |
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation | 2010 |
Serum Phosphate Levels and Risk of Infection in Incident Dialysis Patients
LC Plantinga, NE Fink, ML Melamed, WA Briggs, NR Powe, BG Jaar |
Clinical journal of the American Society of Nephrology : CJASN | 2008 |
Cross-talk between NO and oxyradicals, a supersystem that regulates energy metabolism and survival of animals
M Inoue, EF Sato, AM Park, M Nishikawa, E Kasahara, M Miyoshi, A Ochi, K Utsumi |
Free Radical Research | 2000 |
Reoxygenation-Induced Mitochondrial Damage is Caused by the Ca2-Dependent Mitochondrial Inner Membrane Permeability Transition
T Tanaka, S Hakoda, N Takeyama |
Free radical biology & medicine | 1998 |
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ATP RESYNTHESIS AND CALCIUM ACCUMULATION IN THE REPERFUSED RAT HEART
Y Hasin, MM Kneen, DJ Craik, WG Nayler |
Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology | 1992 |
Tourniquet-induced neuromuscular injury
RA Pedowitz |
Acta Orthopaedica | 1991 |
Dynamics of skeletal muscle energetics during ischemia and reperfusion assessed byin vivo31P NMR
B Soussi, JP Idström, AC Bylund-Fellenius, T Scherstén |
NMR in Biomedicine | 1990 |
Reduction of phosphate-induced dysfunction in rat heart mitochondria by carnitine
J Duan, M Karmazyn |
European Journal of Pharmacology: Molecular Pharmacology | 1990 |
Integration of Mitochondrial Function
JJ Lemasters, CR Hackenbrock, RG Thurman, HV Westerhoff |
1988 | |
Oxygen free radicals in nephrology
C Canavese, P Stratta, A Vercellone |
The International Journal of Artificial Organs | 1987 |
8 Advances in Clinical Fibrinolysis
LW Hessel, C Kluft |
Clinics in Haematology | 1986 |
The effect of glucose upon restitution after transient cerebral ischemia: A summary
E Siemkowicz |
Acta Neurologica Scandinavica | 1985 |
Mechanism of cell damage in brain ischemia: A hypothesis
K Kariman |
Life Sciences | 1985 |