Effects of mtDNA in SHR-mtF344 versus SHR conplastic strains on reduced OXPHOS enzyme levels, insulin resistance, cardiac hypertrophy, and systolic dysfunction

Author:

Houštěk Josef1,Vrbacký Marek1,Hejzlarová Kateřina1,Zídek Václav1,Landa Vladimír1,Šilhavý Jan1,Šimáková Miroslava1,Mlejnek Petr1,Kazdová Ludmila2,Mikšík Ivan1,Neckář Jan1,Papoušek František1,Kolář František1,Kurtz Theodore W.3,Pravenec Michal1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Physiology Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Prague, Czech Republic;

2. Institute for Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Prague, Czech Republic; and

3. Department of Laboratory Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, California

Abstract

Common inbred strains of the laboratory rat can be divided into four major mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplotype groups represented by the BN, F344, LEW, and SHR strains. In the current study, we investigated the metabolic and hemodynamic effects of the SHR vs. F344 mtDNA by comparing the SHR vs. SHR-mtF344 conplastic strains that are genetically identical except for their mitochondrial genomes. Altogether 13 amino acid substitutions in protein coding genes, seven single nucleotide polymorphisms in tRNA genes, and 12 single nucleotide changes in rRNA genes were detected in F344 mtDNA compared with SHR mtDNA. Analysis of oxidative phosphorylation system (OXPHOS) in heart left ventricles (LV), muscle, and liver revealed reduced activity and content of several respiratory chain complexes in SHR-mtF344 conplastic rats compared with the SHR strain. Lower function of OXPHOS in LV of conplastic rats was associated with significantly increased relative ventricular mass and reduced fractional shortening that was independent of blood pressure. In addition, conplastic rats exhibited reduced sensitivity of skeletal muscles to insulin action and impaired glucose tolerance. These results provide evidence that inherited alterations in mitochondrial genome, in the absence of variation in the nuclear genome and other confounding factors, predispose to insulin resistance, cardiac hypertrophy and systolic dysfunction.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Genetics,Physiology

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