Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Oregon Graduate Institute of Science and Technology, Beaverton, Oregon 97006-8921
Abstract
There is an emerging consensus that pharmacological opening of the mitochondrial ATP-sensitive K+ (KATP) channel protects the heart against ischemia-reperfusion damage; however, there are widely divergent views on the effects of openers on isolated heart mitochondria. We have examined the effects of diazoxide and pinacidil on the bioenergetic properties of rat heart mitochondria. As expected of hydrophobic compounds, these drugs have toxic, as well as pharmacological, effects on mitochondria. Both drugs inhibit respiration and increase membrane proton permeability as a function of concentration, causing a decrease in mitochondrial membrane potential and a consequent decrease in Ca2+ uptake, but these effects are not caused by opening mitochondrial KATP channels. In pharmacological doses (<50 μM), both drugs open mitochondrial KATP channels, and resulting changes in membrane potential and respiration are minimal. The increased K+ influx associated with mitochondrial KATP channel opening is ∼30 nmol · min−1 · mg−1, a very low rate that will depolarize by only 1–2 mV. However, this increase in K+ influx causes a significant increase in matrix volume. The volume increase is sufficient to reverse matrix contraction caused by oxidative phosphorylation and can be observed even when respiration is inhibited and the membrane potential is supported by ATP hydrolysis, conditions expected during ischemia. Thus opening mitochondrial KATP channels has little direct effect on respiration, membrane potential, or Ca2+ uptake but has important effects on matrix and intermembrane space volumes.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
352 articles.
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