Skeletal muscle mitochondria demonstrate similar respiration per cristae surface area independent of training status and sex in healthy humans

Author:

Schytz Camilla Tvede1ORCID,Ørtenblad Niels1ORCID,Lundby Anne‐Kristine Meinild2,Jacobs Robert Acton3,Nielsen Joachim1ORCID,Lundby Carsten14

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sports Science and Clinical Biomechanics University of Southern Denmark Odense Denmark

2. Xlab, Department of Biomedical Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

3. Department of Human Physiology & Nutrition University of Colorado Colorado Springs (UCCS) Colorado Springs Colorado USA

4. Department of Health and Exercise Physiology Inland Norway University of Applied Science Lillehammer Norway

Abstract

AbstractThe impact of training status and sex on intrinsic skeletal muscle mitochondrial respiratory capacity remains unclear. We examined this by analysing human skeletal muscle mitochondrial respiration relative to mitochondrial volume and cristae density across training statuses and sexes. Mitochondrial cristae density was estimated in skeletal muscle biopsies originating from previous independent studies. Participants included females (n = 12) and males (n = 41) across training statuses ranging from untrained (UT, n = 8), recreationally active (RA, n = 9), active‐to‐elite runners (RUN, n = 27) and cross‐country skiers (XC, n = 9). The XC and RUN groups demonstrated higher mitochondrial volume density than the RA and UT groups while all active groups (RA, RUN and XC) displayed higher mass‐specific capacity of oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) and mitochondrial cristae density than UT. Differences in OXPHOS diminished between active groups and UT when normalising to mitochondrial volume density and were lost when normalising to muscle cristae surface area density. Moreover, active females (n = 6–9) and males (n = 15–18) did not differ in mitochondrial volume and cristae density, OXPHOS, or when normalising OXPHOS to mitochondrial volume density and muscle cristae surface area density. These findings demonstrate: (1) differences in OXPHOS between active and untrained individuals may be explained by both higher mitochondrial volume and cristae density in active individuals, with no difference in intrinsic mitochondrial respiratory capacity (OXPHOS per muscle cristae surface area density); and (2) no sex differences in mitochondrial volume and cristae density or mass‐specific and normalised OXPHOS. This highlights the importance of normalising OXPHOS to muscle cristae surface area density when studying skeletal muscle mitochondrial biology. imageKey points Oxidative phosphorylation is the mitochondrial process by which ATP is produced, governed by the electrochemical gradient across the inner mitochondrial membrane with infoldings named cristae. In human skeletal muscle, the mass‐specific capacity of oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) can change independently of shifts in mitochondrial volume density, which may be attributed to variations in cristae density. We demonstrate that differences in skeletal muscle OXPHOS between healthy females and males, ranging from untrained to elite endurance athletes, are matched by differences in cristae density. This suggests that higher OXPHOS in skeletal muscles of active individuals is attributable to an increase in the density of cristae. These findings broaden our understanding of the variability in human skeletal muscle OXPHOS and highlight the significance of cristae, specific to mitochondrial respiration.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology

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