Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2087616832> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 94 of
94
with 100 items per page.
- W2087616832 endingPage "348" @default.
- W2087616832 startingPage "347" @default.
- W2087616832 abstract "The antibiotic minocycline exerts cytoprotection in animal disease models. One proposed mechanism is modulation of the mitochondrial permeability transition (mPT), a Ca2+-dependent pathogenic event leading to necrotic and/or apoptotic cell death.1-5 A recent study in HEPATOLOGY by Theruvath et al.,6 investigating storage/reperfusion injury following rat liver transplantation, concluded that minocycline prevented mPT and mitigated liver injury by decreasing mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake without affecting mitochondrial respiration. Further, the authors argue that it could be consistent with clinical practice to (pre)treat stored livers and graft recipients with minocycline. The driving force for mitochondrial Ca2+ transport is the mitochondrial membrane potential and the amount of Ca2+ retained is dependent on the proton gradient and the matrix pH.7 Respiratory inhibition will decrease Ca2+ retention capacity and sensitize mitochondria toward mPT.5, 7 Further, endogenous inhibitors of mPT such as adenine nucleotides and Mg2+ will influence the amount of Ca2+ sequestered prior to mPT. In Theruvath et al., the effect of minocyline on mPT was determined in two classical assays, both using bolus additions of calcium chloride: (1) the swelling assay and (2) the Ca2+ retention capacity assay. In both assays, the endpoint is Ca2+ overload and induction of mPT. The authors found that minocycline prevented Ca2+-induced swelling and decreased Ca2+ retention and interpreted this as a specific inhibitory effect on Ca2+ uptake. They excluded respiratory inhibition as the explanation to their findings by determining the respiration of mitochondria exposed to minocycline with and without Ca2+ addition. However, the buffer used in the respiration assay was different from the one used in the Ca2+ bolus assays, with high Mg2+ concentration (Mg2+ is a known endogenous inhibitor of mPT) and with the presence of the potent pharmacological mPT inhibitor cyclosporin A during Ca2+ addition. We argue that minocycline at moderate to high dosing, similar to what we have shown in brain mitochondria, prevents Ca2+-uptake and mPT-induced swelling by respiratory inhibition.1, 5 Further, depending on the buffer system used, the decreased Ca2+ retention can be explained by minocycline-induced increase of mPT sensitivity related to (1) inhibited respiration1, 5 and (2) chelating of Mg2+,8 or (3) direct activation of mPT (even during concurrent cyclosporin A treatment) by adding Ca2+ or in Ca2+ loaded mitochondria, as recently shown by Kupsch et al.8 To stringently evaluate effects of minocycline during the process of Ca2+ uptake, retention, and mPT, mitochondrial oxygen consumption can be monitored during a continuous Ca2+ infusion (Fig. 1A,B). This assay provides information of the bioenergetic demand on mitochondria caused by Ca2+ uptake as well as the respiratory inhibition triggered by mitochondrial Ca2+ overload and mPT.5, 7 Alternatively, the effect of minocycline on isolated mitochondria can be displayed by following changes of extramitochondrial Ca2+ during a slow infusion of the cation. Reduction of calcium retention capacity in rat and human liver mitochondria by minocycline. Calcium retention capacity (CRC) was determined in mitochondria exposed to a continuous Ca2+ infusion by monitoring changes in (A, B) oxygen consumption or (C, D) extramitochondrial calcium concentration ([Ca2+]). Experimental conditions were as described in Morota et al.5 All experiments were replicated in 3–4 separate mitochondrial preparations. Representative traces of (A) oxygen consumption and (C) Fura 6F fluorescence ratio during continuous Ca2+ infusion in isolated rat liver mitochondria (100 μg/mL, 200 nmol Ca2+/mg/minute) and human liver mitochondria (150 μg/mL, 50 nmol Ca2+/mg/minute), oxidizing complex I-linked substrates in presence of indicated concentrations of minocycline (Mino). During mitochondrial calcium uptake, oxygen consumption increased and extramitochondrial [Ca2+] was kept at a plateau level until activation of permeability transition (mPT) when oxygen consumption rapidly decreased and the retained Ca2+ in mitochondria was released. Calculations of CRC are displayed in (B) and (D) and minocycline dose-dependently decreased the ability of rat (P = 0.0002, r2 = 0.69) and human liver mitochondria (P = 0.0046, r2 = 0.6086) to hold Ca2+. In these more physiologically relevant models, minocycline dose-dependently reduces Ca2+ retention capacity and sensitizes rat and, importantly, human liver mitochondria to the mPT in the dose range used by Theruvath et al. (0–100 nmol/mg mitochondria; Fig. 1). In conclusion, minocycline may be a promising agent for cytoprotection at relevant dosing through mechanisms other than mPT inhibition. In the clinical setting, prevention of mitochondrial Ca2+ uptake via respiratory inhibition is likely not beneficial to the organism. Further, to sensitize mitochondria to mPT by chelating Mg2+ is not a viable strategy for cytoprotection. This must be kept in mind when considering the use of minocycline, even at moderate dosing, to mitigate storage/reperfusion injury during liver transplantation. Human Subjects: The study of mitochondria derived from human liver tissue was carried out in compliance with national legislation and the Code of Ethical Principles for Medical Research Involving Human Subjects of the World Medical Association (Declaration of Helsinki) and approved by the Ethical Committee of Hachioji Medical Center, Tokyo Medical University, Tokyo, Japan with permit number 12–0. Animal Experimentation: All animal procedures were approved by the Malmö/Lund (Sweden) Ethical Committee for Animal Research (permit numbers M230-03, M44-07). Adequate measures were taken to minimize pain or discomfort, and all experiments were conducted in accordance with U.S. and international standards on animal welfare. Roland Månsson* , Saori Morota*, Magnus J. Hansson* , Ichiro Sonoda¶, Yoshihiro Yasuda¶, Motohide Shimazu¶, Ayumu Sugiura , Shigeru Yanagi , Hitoshi Miura , Hiroyuki Uchino**, Eskil Elmér* §, * Mitochondrial Pathophysiology Unit, Laboratory for Experimental Brain Research, Department of Clinical Sciences, Lund University, Lund, Sweden, Department of Neurology, Malmö University Hospital, Malmö, Sweden, Department of Clinical Physiology, Center for Medical Imaging and Physiology, Lund University Hospital, Lund, Sweden, § Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, Lund University Hospital, Lund, Sweden, ¶ Department of Gastroenterological Surgery, Tokyo Medical University, Hachioji Medical Center, Hachioji, Tokyo, Japan, ** Department of Anesthesiology, Tokyo Medical University, Hachioji Medical Center, Hachioji, Tokyo, Japan, Laboratory of Molecular Biochemistry, School of Life Sciences, Tokyo University of Pharmacy and Life Sciences, Hachioji, Tokyo, Japan, Division of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, Ohyachi Hospital, Sapporo City, Sapporo, Hokkaido, Japan." @default.
- W2087616832 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2087616832 creator A5006430479 @default.
- W2087616832 creator A5013264178 @default.
- W2087616832 creator A5016342097 @default.
- W2087616832 creator A5026783928 @default.
- W2087616832 creator A5033672050 @default.
- W2087616832 creator A5042056281 @default.
- W2087616832 creator A5053765147 @default.
- W2087616832 creator A5063104255 @default.
- W2087616832 creator A5063819703 @default.
- W2087616832 creator A5068561974 @default.
- W2087616832 creator A5086342334 @default.
- W2087616832 date "2009-11-30" @default.
- W2087616832 modified "2023-10-16" @default.
- W2087616832 title "Minocycline sensitizes rodent and human liver mitochondria to the permeability transition: Implications for toxicity in liver transplantation" @default.
- W2087616832 cites W1537282226 @default.
- W2087616832 cites W1993381147 @default.
- W2087616832 cites W2077209766 @default.
- W2087616832 cites W2086129284 @default.
- W2087616832 cites W2097281218 @default.
- W2087616832 cites W2127864583 @default.
- W2087616832 cites W2145636236 @default.
- W2087616832 cites W2171811475 @default.
- W2087616832 doi "https://doi.org/10.1002/hep.23465" @default.
- W2087616832 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20034033" @default.
- W2087616832 hasPublicationYear "2009" @default.
- W2087616832 type Work @default.
- W2087616832 sameAs 2087616832 @default.
- W2087616832 citedByCount "9" @default.
- W2087616832 countsByYear W20876168322012 @default.
- W2087616832 countsByYear W20876168322013 @default.
- W2087616832 countsByYear W20876168322016 @default.
- W2087616832 countsByYear W20876168322021 @default.
- W2087616832 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2087616832 hasAuthorship W2087616832A5006430479 @default.
- W2087616832 hasAuthorship W2087616832A5013264178 @default.
- W2087616832 hasAuthorship W2087616832A5016342097 @default.
- W2087616832 hasAuthorship W2087616832A5026783928 @default.
- W2087616832 hasAuthorship W2087616832A5033672050 @default.
- W2087616832 hasAuthorship W2087616832A5042056281 @default.
- W2087616832 hasAuthorship W2087616832A5053765147 @default.
- W2087616832 hasAuthorship W2087616832A5063104255 @default.
- W2087616832 hasAuthorship W2087616832A5063819703 @default.
- W2087616832 hasAuthorship W2087616832A5068561974 @default.
- W2087616832 hasAuthorship W2087616832A5086342334 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConcept C126322002 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConcept C13591479 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConcept C185592680 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConcept C190283241 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConcept C2778275353 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConcept C28859421 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConcept C2911091166 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConcept C31573885 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConcept C501593827 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConcept C55493867 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConcept C71924100 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConcept C86803240 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConcept C98274493 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConceptScore W2087616832C126322002 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConceptScore W2087616832C13591479 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConceptScore W2087616832C185592680 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConceptScore W2087616832C190283241 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConceptScore W2087616832C2778275353 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConceptScore W2087616832C28859421 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConceptScore W2087616832C2911091166 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConceptScore W2087616832C31573885 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConceptScore W2087616832C501593827 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConceptScore W2087616832C55493867 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConceptScore W2087616832C71924100 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConceptScore W2087616832C86803240 @default.
- W2087616832 hasConceptScore W2087616832C98274493 @default.
- W2087616832 hasIssue "1" @default.
- W2087616832 hasLocation W20876168321 @default.
- W2087616832 hasLocation W20876168322 @default.
- W2087616832 hasOpenAccess W2087616832 @default.
- W2087616832 hasPrimaryLocation W20876168321 @default.
- W2087616832 hasRelatedWork W1593734817 @default.
- W2087616832 hasRelatedWork W1771271124 @default.
- W2087616832 hasRelatedWork W2042969785 @default.
- W2087616832 hasRelatedWork W2045846836 @default.
- W2087616832 hasRelatedWork W2077115810 @default.
- W2087616832 hasRelatedWork W2117173714 @default.
- W2087616832 hasRelatedWork W2165534500 @default.
- W2087616832 hasRelatedWork W2317949769 @default.
- W2087616832 hasRelatedWork W2368734402 @default.
- W2087616832 hasRelatedWork W2419558278 @default.
- W2087616832 hasVolume "51" @default.
- W2087616832 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2087616832 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2087616832 magId "2087616832" @default.
- W2087616832 workType "article" @default.