Lopez-Campistrous Ana, Hao Li, Xiang Wang, Ton Dong, Semchuk Paul, Sander Joerg, Ellison Michael J, Fernandez-Patron Carlos
Department of Biochemistry, Institute for Biomolecular Design, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Hypertension. 2008 Feb;51(2):412-9. doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.107.102285. Epub 2008 Jan 2.
The central nervous system plays a critical role in the normal control of arterial blood pressure and in its elevation in virtually all forms of hypertension. Mitochondrial dysfunction has been increasingly associated with the development of hypertension. Therefore, we examined whether mitochondrial dysfunction occurs in the brain in hypertension and characterized it at the molecular scale. Mitochondria from whole brain and brain stem from 12-week-old spontaneously hypertensive rats with elevated blood pressure (190+/-5 mm Hg) were compared against those from age-matched normotensive (134+/-7 mm Hg) Wistar Kyoto rats (n=4 in each group). Global differential analysis using 2D electrophoresis followed by tandem mass spectrometry-based protein identification suggested a downregulation of enzymes involved in cellular energetics in hypertension. Targeted differential analysis of mitochondrial respiratory complexes using the classical blue-native SDS-PAGE/Western method and a complementary combination of sucrose-gradient ultracentrifugation/tandem mass spectrometry revealed previously unknown assembly defects in complexes I, III, IV, and V in hypertension. Interestingly, targeted examination of the brain stem, a regulator of cardiovascular homeostasis and systemic blood pressure, further showed the occurrence of mitochondrial complex I dysfunction, elevated reactive oxygen species production, decreased ATP synthesis, and impaired respiration in hypertension. Our findings suggest that in already-hypertensive spontaneously hypertensive rats, the brain respiratory complexes exhibit previously unknown assembly defects. These defects impair the function of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. This mitochondrial dysfunction localizes to the brain stem and is, therefore, likely to contribute to the development, as well as to pathophysiological complications, of hypertension.
中枢神经系统在动脉血压的正常调控以及几乎所有类型高血压中血压升高的过程中都起着关键作用。线粒体功能障碍与高血压的发生发展越来越相关。因此,我们研究了高血压时大脑中是否发生线粒体功能障碍,并在分子水平上对其进行了表征。将12周龄血压升高(190±5毫米汞柱)的自发性高血压大鼠全脑和脑干中的线粒体与年龄匹配的血压正常(134±7毫米汞柱)的Wistar Kyoto大鼠(每组n = 4)的线粒体进行比较。使用二维电泳随后基于串联质谱的蛋白质鉴定进行全局差异分析,结果表明高血压时参与细胞能量代谢的酶表达下调。使用经典的蓝色非变性SDS-PAGE/蛋白质印迹法以及蔗糖梯度超速离心/串联质谱的互补组合对线粒体呼吸复合物进行靶向差异分析,发现高血压时复合物I、III、IV和V存在以前未知的组装缺陷。有趣的是,对心血管稳态和全身血压的调节中枢脑干进行靶向检查,进一步显示高血压时线粒体复合物I功能障碍、活性氧产生增加、ATP合成减少以及呼吸受损。我们的研究结果表明,在已经患有高血压的自发性高血压大鼠中,大脑呼吸复合物存在以前未知的组装缺陷。这些缺陷损害了线粒体呼吸链的功能。这种线粒体功能障碍定位于脑干,因此可能导致高血压的发生以及病理生理并发症。