Greater Yield Of Subsarcolemmal Mitochondria From Skeletal Muscle Of Obese Subjects With No Change In Intrinsic Mitochondrial Function

FASEB JOURNAL(2015)

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摘要
Whether obesity influences content and functional capacity of skeletal muscle mitochondria (MITO) remains unresolved. In this study, biopsies of vastus lateralis from lean and obese human subjects were used to isolate subsarcolemmal (SS) and intermyofibrillar (IMF) MITO. IMF MITO were liberated using a protease. The SS and IMF were pelleted separately, using differential centrifugation. Skeletal muscle from obese subjects gave higher MITO protein yield, per g wet muscle vs. skeletal muscle from lean subjects in the SS but not in the IMF. There was a trend for higher isolated yields of citrate synthase (CS) activity, a marker for MITO content, in the muscle of obese subjects vs. lean subjects in SS, but not in IMF MITO. O 2 consumption ( J O ) and ATP production rates measured with NAD‐linked substrates (malate+pyruvate+glutamate), were not different in obese vs. lean in either SS or IMF MITO expressed either per mg MITO protein or per unit CS activity. The similarities in MITO function observed in SS and IMF from both lean and obese human muscle, suggests comparable functional capacity per unit MITO, regardless of the location within the myocyte, or whether the MITO reside in skeletal muscle from lean or obese subjects. However, higher total yield of both protein and CS activities in the SS MITO from the muscle of obese subjects, point to the possibility for greater content of SS MITO in muscle of obese individuals. This conclusion must be qualified; these results may be due to a greater fractional yield of MITO during the isolation procedure of skeletal muscle from obese subjects.
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Mitochondrial Fission
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