Enhanced Mitochondria-SR Tethering Triggers Adaptive Cardiac Muscle Remodeling

Author:

Nichtová Zuzana1,Fernandez-Sanz Celia2ORCID,De La Fuente Sergio2,Yuan Yuexing2,Hurst Stephen1ORCID,Lanvermann Sebastian2,Tsai Hui-Ying2,Weaver David1,Baggett Ariele1ORCID,Thompson Christopher3ORCID,Bouchet-Marquis Cedric3,Várnai Péter4ORCID,Seifert Erin L.1,Dorn Gerald W.5ORCID,Sheu Shey-Shing2,Csordás György1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. MitoCare, Pathology and Genomic Medicine (Z.N., S.H., D.W., A.B., E.L.S., G.C.), Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA.

2. Center for Translational Medicine (C.F.-S., S.D.L.F., Y.Y., S.L., H.-Y.T., S.-S.S.), Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA.

3. Thermo Fisher Scientific, Hillsboro, OR (C.T., C.B.-M.).

4. Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Semmelweis University, Budapest, Hungary (P.V.).

5. Center for Pharmacogenomics, John T. Milliken Department of Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO (G.W.D.).

Abstract

Background: Cardiac contractile function requires high energy from mitochondria, and Ca 2+ from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). Via local Ca 2+ transfer at close mitochondria-SR contacts, cardiac excitation feedforward regulates mitochondrial ATP production to match surges in demand (excitation-bioenergetics coupling). However, pathological stresses may cause mitochondrial Ca 2+ overload, excessive reactive oxygen species production and permeability transition, risking homeostatic collapse and myocyte loss. Excitation-bioenergetics coupling involves mitochondria-SR tethers but the role of tethering in cardiac physiology/pathology is debated. Endogenous tether proteins are multifunctional; therefore, nonselective targets to scrutinize interorganelle linkage. Here, we assessed the physiological/pathological relevance of selective chronic enhancement of cardiac mitochondria-SR tethering. Methods: We introduced to mice a cardiac muscle-specific engineered tether (linker) transgene with a fluorescent protein core and deployed 2D/3D electron microscopy, biochemical approaches, fluorescence imaging, in vivo and ex vivo cardiac performance monitoring and stress challenges to characterize the linker phenotype. Results: Expressed in the mature cardiomyocytes, the linker expanded and tightened individual mitochondria-junctional SR contacts; but also evoked a marked remodeling with large dense mitochondrial clusters that excluded dyads. Yet, excitation-bioenergetics coupling remained well-preserved, likely due to more longitudinal mitochondria-dyad contacts and nanotunnelling between mitochondria exposed to junctional SR and those sealed away from junctional SR. Remarkably, the linker decreased female vulnerability to acute massive β-adrenergic stress. It also reduced myocyte death and mitochondrial calcium-overload-associated myocardial impairment in ex vivo ischemia/reperfusion injury. Conclusions: We propose that mitochondria-SR/endoplasmic reticulum contacts operate at a structural optimum. Although acute changes in tethering may cause dysfunction, upon chronic enhancement of contacts from early life, adaptive remodeling of the organelles shifts the system to a new, stable structural optimum. This remodeling balances the individually enhanced mitochondrion-junctional SR crosstalk and excitation-bioenergetics coupling, by increasing the connected mitochondrial pool and, presumably, Ca 2+ /reactive oxygen species capacity, which then improves the resilience to stresses associated with dysregulated hyperactive Ca 2+ signaling.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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