4.5 Article

Protein modulation in mouse heart under acute and chronic hypoxia

Journal

PROTEOMICS
Volume 11, Issue 21, Pages 4202-4217

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201000804

Keywords

AMPK; Animal proteomics; Apoptosis; Autophagy; Heart; Hypoxia

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of University and Scientific Research [FIRB RBRN07BMCT]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Exploring cellular mechanisms underlying beneficial and detrimental responses to hypoxia represents the object of the present study. Signaling molecules controlling adaptation to hypoxia (HIF-1 alpha), energy balance (AMPK), mitochondrial biogenesis (PGC-1 alpha), autophagic/apoptotic processes regulation and proteomic dysregulation were assessed. Responses to acute hypoxia (AH) and chronic hypoxia (CH) in mouse heart proteome were detected by 2-D DIGE, mass spectrometry and antigen-antibody reactions. Both in AH and CH, the results indicated a deregulation of proteins related to sarcomere stabilization and muscle contraction. Neither in AH nor in CH the HIF-1 alpha stabilization was observed. In AH, the metabolic adaptation to lack of oxygen was controlled by AMPK activation and sustained by an up-regulation of adenosylhomocysteinase and acetyl-CoA synthetase. AH was characterized by the mitophagic protein Bnip 3 increment. PGC-1 alpha, a master regulator of mitochondrial biogenesis, was down-regulated. CH was characterized by the up-regulation of enzymes involved in antioxidant defense, in aldehyde bio-product detoxification and in misfolded protein degradation. In addition, a general down-regulation of enzymes controlling anaerobic metabolism was observed. After 10 days of hypoxia, cardioprotective molecules were substantially decreased whereas pro-apoptotic molecules increased accompained by down-regulation of specific target proteins.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available