| Literature DB >> 35304170 |
David R Eberhardt1, Sandra H Lee1, Xue Yin1, Anthony M Balynas1, Emma C Rekate1, Jackie N Kraiss1, Marisa J Lang2, Maureen A Walsh2, Molly E Streiff3, Andrea C Corbin3, Ying Li4, Katsuhiko Funai2, Frank B Sachse3, Dipayan Chaudhuri5.
Abstract
Altered levels of intracellular calcium (Ca2+) are a highly prevalent feature in different forms of cardiac injury, producing changes in contractility, arrhythmias, and mitochondrial dysfunction. In cardiac ischemia-reperfusion injury, mitochondrial Ca2+ overload leads to pathological production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), activates the permeability transition, and cardiomyocyte death. Here we investigated the cardiac phenotype caused by deletion of EF-hand domain-containing protein D1 (Efhd1-/-), a Ca2+-binding mitochondrial protein whose function is poorly understood. Efhd1-/- mice are viable and have no adverse cardiac phenotypes. They feature reductions in basal ROS levels and mitoflash events, both important precursors for mitochondrial injury, though cardiac mitochondria have normal susceptibility to Ca2+ overload. Notably, we also find that Efhd1-/- mice and their cardiomyocytes are resistant to hypoxic injury.Entities:
Keywords: Hypoxia; Ischemia reperfusion; Mitocalcin; Mitochondria; Mitochondrial calcium transport; Mitochondrial outer membrane; Permeability transition; Reactive oxygen species; Swiprosin-2
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35304170 PMCID: PMC9107497 DOI: 10.1016/j.yjmcc.2022.03.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Cell Cardiol ISSN: 0022-2828 Impact factor: 5.763