The effect of oxygen in Sirt3-mediated myocardial protection: A proof-of-concept study in cultured cardiomyoblasts
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-20, 04:50authored byDiehl, P, Gaul, DS, Sogl, J, Flierl, U, Darren HenstridgeDarren Henstridge, Pahla, J, Bugger, H, Emmert, MY, Ruschitzka, F, Bode, C, Luscher, TF, Moser, M, Matter, CM, Peter, K, Winnik, S
Sirtuin 3 is a nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide dependent mitochondrial deacetylase that governs mitochondrial metabolism and oxidative defense. The demise in myocardial function following myocardial ischemia has been associated with mitochondrial dysfunction. Sirt3 maintains myocardial contractile function and protects from cardiac hypertrophy. The role of Sirt3 in ischemia is controversial. Our objective was to understand, under what circumstances Sirt3 is protective in different facets of ischemia, using an in vitro proof-of-concept approach based on simulated ischemia in cultured cardiomyoblasts. Cultured H9c2 cardiomyoblasts were subjected to hypoxia and/or serum deprivation, the combination of which we refer to as simulated ischemia. Apoptosis, as assessed by Annexin V staining in life-cell imaging and propidium-iodide inclusion in flow cytometry, was enhanced following simulated ischemia. Interestingly, serum deprivation was a stronger trigger of apoptosis than hypoxia. Knockdown of Sirt3 further increased apoptosis upon serum deprivation, whereas no such effect occurred upon additional hypoxia. Similarly, only upon serum deprivation but not upon simulated ischemia, silencing of Sirt3 led to a deterioration of mitochondrial function in extracellular flux analysis. In the absence of oxygen these Sirt3-dependent effects were abolished. These data indicate, that Sirt3-mediated myocardial protection is oxygen-dependent. Thus, mitochondrial respiration takes center-stage in Sirt3-dependent prevention of stress-induced myocardial damage.
History
Publication title
Journal of Thrombosis and Thrombolysis
Volume
46
Pagination
102-112
ISSN
0929-5305
Department/School
School of Health Sciences
Publisher
Springer New York LLC
Place of publication
United States
Rights statement
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