Mitochondrial succinate transport as a novel therapeutic target for cardiac ischemia/reperfusion injury

European Heart Journal(2023)

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摘要
Abstract Background The accumulation of the mitochondrial metabolite succinate during ischemia and its rapid oxidation by succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) upon reperfusion drives ischemia/reperfusion injury (IRI) in myocardial infarction. Succinate oxidation leads to the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) by reverse electron transport (RET) at mitochondrial complex I, orchestrating a cascade of events leading to cardiomyocyte death. Modulating succinate metabolism, such as SDH inhibition, is a promising therapeutic strategy. During ischemia, the mitochondria produced succinate is transported into the cytosol, enabling the accumulation of a large succinate pool. On reperfusion, the succinate is transported back into mitochondria and oxidised by SDH, thus we hypothesised that targeting succinate mitochondrial transport could be a novel therapeutic target to prevent cardiac IRI. Purpose To assess the role of succinate mitochondrial transport as a novel therapeutic target to prevent cardiac IRI. Methods Isolated heart mitochondria were used to assess mitochondrial respiration by Oroboros, RET-ROS production by Amplex Red and butylmalonate delivery. Cultured H9C2 myoblasts and isolated primary adult cardiomyocytes from C57BL/6J mice were used to assess butylmalonate uptake and delivery from esters, as well as their impact on succinate accumulation and oxidation in vitro. LAD ligation and reperfusion in C57BL/6J mice was used as an in vivo MI model. Metabolite levels were measured by LC-MS/MS. Results Butylmalonate, an inhibitor of the mitochondrial dicarboxylate carrier (DIC), blocks succinate-dependent respiration and RET-ROS production in isolated mitochondria. However, butylmalonate entry into cells was inefficient and does not impact infarct size after IRI in vivo. We developed novel butylmalonate esters to improve butylmalonate delivery to cardiomyocytes in vivo. We found that diacetoxymethyl butylmalonate (DAB) effectively delivered butylmalonate and could prevent succinate accumulation and oxidation in vitro. DAB could also prevent succinate-mediated respiration and RET-ROS at lower concentrations than butylmalonate alone. Finally, DAB reduced acute infarct size in vivo when administered at reperfusion. Conclusions Blocking succinate transport back into mitochondria at reperfusion prevents the damage in IRI by preventing the oxidation of succinate by SDH and downstream RET-ROS production. Therefore, targeting the mitochondrial transport of succinate may be a promising novel strategy in preventing cardiac IRI.
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mitochondrial succinate transport,cardiac ischemia/reperfusion,ischemia/reperfusion injury,novel therapeutic target
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