Mouse strain-specific responses of mitochondrial respiratory function and cardiac hypertrophy to isoproterenol treatment.

2021 
Cardiac hypertrophy is a common pathological process of various cardiovascular diseases and eventually develops into heart failure. This paper was aimed to study the different pathological characteristics exhibited by different mouse strains after hypertrophy stimulation. Two mouse strains, A/J and FVB/nJ, were treated with isoproterenol (ISO) by osmotic pump to induce cardiac hypertrophy. Echocardiography was performed to monitor heart morphology and function. Mitochondria were isolated from hearts in each group, and oxidative phosphorylation function was assayed in vitro. The results showed that both strains showed a compensatory enhancement of heart contractile function after 1-week ISO treatment. The A/J mice, but not the FVB/nJ mice, developed significant cardiac hypertrophy after 3-week ISO treatment as evidenced by increases in left ventricular posterior wall thickness, heart weight/body weight ratio, cross sectional area of cardiomyocytes and cardiac hypertrophic markers. Interestingly, the heart from A/J mice contained higher mitochondrial DNA copy number compared with that from FVB/nJ mice. Functionally, the mitochondria from A/J mice displayed faster O2 consumption at state III with either complex I substrates or complex II substrate, compared with those from FVB/nJ mice. ISO treatment did not affect mitochondrial respiratory control rate (RCR), but significantly suppressed the ADP/O ratio generated from the complex II substrate in both strains. The ADP/O ratio generated from the complex I substrates in A/J mice declined by 50% after ISO treatment, whereas FVB/nJ mice were not affected. These results suggest that, compared with FVB/nJ mice, A/J mice possesses a poor integrity of mitochondrial respiratory chain that might contribute to its vulnerability to ISO-induced cardiac hypertrophy.
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