| Literature DB >> 27130633 |
James D McCully1,2, Sidney Levitsky3,4, Pedro J Del Nido5,4, Douglas B Cowan6,4.
Abstract
Mitochondria play a key role in the homeostasis of the vast majority of the body's cells. In the myocardium where mitochondria constitute 30 % of the total myocardial cell volume, temporary attenuation or obstruction of blood flow and as a result oxygen delivery to myocardial cells (ischemia) severely alters mitochondrial structure and function. These alterations in mitochondrial structure and function occur during ischemia and continue after blood flow and oxygen delivery to the myocardium is restored, and significantly decrease myocardial contractile function and myocardial cell survival. We hypothesized that the augmentation or replacement of mitochondria damaged by ischemia would provide a mechanism to enhance cellular function and cellular rescue following the restoration of blood flow. To test this hypothesis we have used a model of myocardial ischemia and reperfusion. Our studies demonstrate that the transplantation of autologous mitochondria, isolated from the patient's own body, and then directly injected into the myocardial during early reperfusion augment the function of native mitochondria damaged during ischemia and enhances myocardial post-ischemic functional recovery and cellular viability. The transplanted mitochondria act both extracellularly and intracellularly. Extracellularly, the transplanted mitochondria enhance high energy synthesis and cellular adenosine triphosphate stores and alter the myocardial proteome. Once internalized the transplanted mitochondria rescue cellular function and replace damaged mitochondrial DNA. There is no immune or auto-immune reaction and there is no pro-arrhythmia as a result of the transplanted mitochondria. Our studies and those of others demonstrate that mitochondrial transplantation can be effective in a number of cell types and diseases. These include cardiac and skeletal muscle, pulmonary and hepatic tissue and cells and in neuronal tissue. In this review we discuss the mechanisms leading to mitochondrial dysfunction and the effects on cellular function. We provide a methodology for the isolation of mitochondria to allow for clinical relevance and we discuss the methods we and others have used for the uptake and internalization of mitochondria. We foresee that mitochondrial transplantation will be a valued treatment in the armamentarium of all clinicians and surgeons for the treatment of varied ischemic disorders, mitochondrial diseases and related disorders.Entities:
Keywords: Ischemia/reperfusion injury; Mitochondria; Myocardium; Surgery
Year: 2016 PMID: 27130633 PMCID: PMC4851669 DOI: 10.1186/s40169-016-0095-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Med ISSN: 2001-1326
Fig. 1Mitochondrial damage following ischemia. Representative transmission electron photomicrographs from left ventricular tissue from Control (non-ischemic) and Ischemia (30 min ischemia) hearts. In Control hearts sarcomere structure is preserved and mitochondria have electron dense intracristae matrix and normal size. In Ischemia hearts there is separation myofilaments and severely swollen and electron transparent mitochondria containing numerous mitochondrial calcium granules. Calcium granules (Ca ), mitochondrion (M), sarcomere (S) and nucleus (N) are indicated. Scale bars (2 um are shown)
Fig. 2Myocardial mitochondrial changes occurring during ischemia. The changes to mitochondria occurring during ischemia are noted. These changes extend following the restoration of blood flow and oxygen delivery to the myocardium (reperfusion) and significantly decrease myocardial function and cell viability. Mitochondrial transplantation (the direct injection of viable exogenous mitochondria) into the ischemic myocardium, just prior to reperfusion significantly enhances myocardial function and cell viability
Fig. 3Mitochondrial isolation. Our protocol for mitochondrial isolation is illustrated. In brief a mini-thoracotomy or a sternotomy is performed and tissue is obtained from either pectoralis major or from rectus abdominous muscle. The amount of tissue is small and is shown in comparison to an American 10 cent piece. Mitochondria are isolated. Our methodology for mitochondrial isolation is shown [27]. Mitochondrial isolation can be performed in less than 30 min. Quality control parameters for mitochondrial isolation and transplantation have been established [28]
Fig. 4Experimental outline for mitochondrial transplantation studies [19, 20]
Fig. 5Transplanted mitochondria are internalized by a variety of cell types: a neonatal rat cardiomyocytes, b adult rat cardiomyocytes, c rat skeletal myoblasts, d embryonic rat neurons and e mixed embryonic rat neuronal cells. Internalized pHrodo Red-labeled rat liver mitochondria (red) following 4 h co-culture are shown in each cell type. In all images the blue stain is DAPI, alpha-actinin 2 is depicted in green. Scale bars are 10 um
Mitochondrial transplantation
| Tissue | Heart | Heart | Liver | Brain |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Animal model | Rabbit | Rabbit | Rat | Rat |
| Experimental model | Langendorff perfused heart | In situ, blood perfused | In situ, blood perfused | In situ brain |
| Injury model | Ischemia/reperfusion | Ischemia/reperfusion | Ischemia/reperfusion | Parkinson’s disease |
| Mitochondria | Unmodified | Unmodified | Unmodified | Conjugated with PEP-1 |
| Delivery | Direct injection | Direct injection | Direct injection | Direct injection |
| Outcome | Enhanced myocardial function following ischemia, enhanced cell viability | Enhanced myocardial function following ischemia, enhanced cell viability | Decreased liver tissue injury and apoptosis | Peptide-mediated mitochondrial transplantation lessened Parkinson’s disease movement disorder and attenuated the deterioration of dopaminergic neurons |
| Reference | McCully et al. [ | Masuzawa et al. [ | Lin et al. [ | Chang et al. [ |