Servicio de Neumología, Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Marañón. c/ Doctor Ezquerdo 46, 28007 Madrid, Spain.
Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol. 2012 Sep;47(3):358-62. doi: 10.1165/rcmb.2011-0382OC. Epub 2012 Apr 5.
Exercise triggers skeletal muscle oxidative stress in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The objective of this research was to study the specific sites of reactive oxygen species (ROS) production in mitochondria isolated from skeletal muscle of patients with COPD and its relationship with local oxidative stress induced by exercise. Vastus lateralis biopsies were obtained in 16 patients with COPD (66 ± 10 yr; FEV(1), 54 ± 12% ref) and in 14 control subjects with normal lung function who required surgery because of lung cancer (65 ± 7 yr; FEV(1), 91 ± 14% ref) at rest and after exercise. In these biopsies we isolated mitochondria and mitochondrial membrane fragments and determined in vitro mitochondrial oxygen consumption (Mit$$\stackrel{.}{\hbox{ V }}$$o(2)) and ROS production before and after inhibition of complex I (rotenone), complex II (stigmatellin), and complex III (antimycin-A). We related the in vitro ROS production during state 3 respiration), which mostly corresponds to the mitochondria respiratory state during exercise, with skeletal muscle oxidative stress after exercise, as measured by thiobarbituric acid reactive substances.State 3 Mit$$\stackrel{.}{\hbox{ V }}$$o(2) was similar in patients with COPD and control subjects (191 ± 27 versus 229 ± 46 nmol/min/mg; P = 0.058), whereas H(2)O(2) production was higher in the former (147 ± 39 versus 51 ± 8 pmol/mg/h; P < 0.001). The addition of complexI, II, and III inhibitors identify complex III as the main site of H(2)O(2) release by mitochondria in patients with COPD and in control subjects. The mitochondrial production of H(2)O(2) in state 3 respiration was related (r = 0.69; P < 0.001) to postexercise muscle thiobarbituric acid reactive substance levels. Our results show that complex III is the main site of the enhanced mitochondrial H(2)O(2) production that occurs in skeletal muscle of patients with COPD, and the latter appears to contribute to muscle oxidative damage.
运动可引发慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)患者骨骼肌氧化应激。本研究旨在研究 COPD 患者骨骼肌线粒体中活性氧(ROS)产生的特定部位及其与运动引起的局部氧化应激的关系。16 例 COPD 患者(66 ± 10 岁;FEV1,54 ± 12%预计值)和 14 例因肺癌需手术的肺功能正常对照者(65 ± 7 岁;FEV1,91 ± 14%预计值)在休息和运动后取股外侧肌活检。在这些活检中,我们分离出线粒体和线粒体膜片段,并在体外测定线粒体耗氧量(Mit$\stackrel{.}{\hbox{ V }}$o(2))和 ROS 生成,然后抑制复合体 I(鱼藤酮)、复合体 II( stigmatellin)和复合体 III(antimycin-A)。我们将体外 ROS 生成(主要对应于运动期间的线粒体呼吸状态)与运动后骨骼肌的氧化应激相关联,通过硫代巴比妥酸反应物质(TBARS)来测量。COPD 患者和对照组的状态 3 Mit$\stackrel{.}{\hbox{ V }}$o(2)相似(191 ± 27 与 229 ± 46 nmol/min/mg;P = 0.058),而前者的 H(2)O(2)生成较高(147 ± 39 与 51 ± 8 pmol/mg/h;P < 0.001)。添加复合体 I、II 和 III 抑制剂表明,在 COPD 患者和对照组中,复合体 III 是线粒体释放 H(2)O(2)的主要部位。在状态 3 呼吸中,线粒体 H(2)O(2)的产生与运动后肌肉 TBARS 水平相关(r = 0.69;P < 0.001)。我们的结果表明,复合体 III 是 COPD 患者骨骼肌中增强的线粒体 H(2)O(2)产生的主要部位,后者似乎导致肌肉氧化损伤。