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1.
Nitric oxide has been strongly implicated in the development of tissue infarction in response to focal cerebral ischemia. Nitric oxide and its derivatives can inhibit components of the electron transport chain, providing a likely target for these substances in ischemic and post-ischemic brain. Lactate content is increased during post-ischemic reperfusion in tissue destined to become infarcted, consistent with impairment of mitochondrial respiration. To investigate the possible involvement of nitric oxide in generating these changes, we have tested the effect of 7-nitroindazole, a nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibitor, on the content of lactate and other metabolites during early reperfusion following temporary focal ischemia. This treatment inhibited total NOS by approximately 50%. However, the treatment did not significantly affect the marked increases in lactate in post-ischemic brain nor did it alter the recovery of other energy-related metabolites. These findings indicate that inhibition of oxidative metabolism is probably not the primary site of the deleterious effects of nitric oxide and derivatives during early post-ischemic reperfusion. Special issue dedicated to John P. Blass.  相似文献   

2.
Mitochondrial contributions to tissue damage in stroke   总被引:19,自引:0,他引:19  
Tissue infarction, involving death of essentially all cells within a part of the brain, is a common pathology resulting from stroke and an important determinant of the long-term consequences of this disorder. The cell death that leads to infarct formation is likely to be the result of multiple interacting pathological processes. A range of factors, including the severity of the ischemic insult and whether this is permanent or reversed, determine which mechanisms predominate. Although evaluating mitochondrial properties in intact brain is difficult, evidence for several potentially deleterious responses to cerebral ischemia or post-ischemic reperfusion have been obtained from investigations using animal models of stroke. Marked changes in ATP and related energy metabolites develop quickly in response to occlusion of a cerebral artery, as expected from limitations in the delivery of oxygen and glucose. However, these alterations are often only partially reversed on reperfusion despite improved substrate delivery. Ischemia-induced decreases in the mitochondrial capacity for respiratory activity probably contribute to the ongoing impairment of energy metabolism during reperfusion and possibly also to the magnitude of changes seen during ischemia. Conditions during reperfusion are likely to be conducive to the induction of the permeability transition in mitochondria. There are as yet no well-characterized techniques to identify this change in the intact brain. However, the protective effects of some agents that block formation of the transition pore are consistent with both the induction of the permeability transition during early recirculation and a role for this in the development of tissue damage. Release of cytochrome c into the cytoplasm of cells has been observed with both permanent and reversed ischemia and could trigger the death of some cells by apoptosis, a process which probably contributes to the expansion of the ischemic lesion. Mitochondria are also likely to contribute to the widely-accepted role of nitric oxide in the development of ischemic damage. These organelles are a probable target for the deleterious effects of this substance and can also act as a source of superoxide for reaction with the nitric oxide to produce the damaging species, peroxynitrite. Further characterization of these mitochondrial responses should help to elucidate the mechanisms of cell death due to cerebral ischemia and possibly point to novel sites for therapeutic interventions in stroke.  相似文献   

3.
Brain injury caused by ischemic insult due to significant reduction or interruption in cerebral blood flow leads to disruption of practically all cellular metabolic pathways. This triggers a complex stress response followed by overstimulation of downstream enzymatic pathways due to massive activation of post-translational modifications (PTM). Mitochondria are one of the most sensitive organelle to ischemic conditions. They become dysfunctional due to extensive fragmentation, inhibition of acetyl‑CoA production, and increased activity of NAD+ consuming enzymes. These pathologic conditions ultimately lead to inhibition of oxidative phosphorylation and mitochondrial ATP production. Both acetyl‑CoA and NAD+ are essential intermediates in cellular bioenergetics metabolism and also serve as substrates for post-translational modifications such as acetylation and ADP‑ribosylation. In this review we discuss ischemia/reperfusion-induced changes in NAD+ and acetyl‑CoA metabolism, how these affect relevant PTMs, and therapeutic approaches that restore the physiological levels of these metabolites leading to promising neuroprotection.  相似文献   

4.
A short period of global ischemia results in the death of selected subpopulations of neurons. Some advances have been made in understanding events which might contribute to the selectivity of this damage but the cellular changes which culminate in neuronal death remain poorly defined. This overview examines the metabolic state of tissue in the post-ischemic period and the relationship of changes to the development of damage in areas containing ischemia-susceptible neurons. During early recirculation there is substantial recovery of ATP, phosphocreatine and related metabolites in all brain regions. However, this recovery does not signal restitution of normal energy metabolism as reductions of the oxidative metabolism of glucose are seen in many areas and may persist for several days. Furthermore, decreases in pyruvate-supported respiration develop in mitochondria from at least one ischemia-susceptible region at times coincident with the earliest histological evidence of ischemia-induced degeneration. These mitochondrial changes could simply be an early marker of irreversible damage but the available evidence is equally consistent with these contributing to the degenerative process and offering a potential site for therapeutic intervention.Submitted as an Overview article for the volume of Neurochemical Research in honor of Alan N. Davison.  相似文献   

5.
Mitochondria autophagy, termed as mitophagy, is a mechanism of specific autophagic elimination of mitochondria. Mitophagy controls the quality and the number of mitochondria, eliminating dysfunctional or excessive mitochondria that can generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) and cause cell death. Mitochondria are centrally implicated in neuron and tissue injury after stroke, due to the function of supplying adenosine triphosphate (ATP) to the tissue, regulating oxidative metabolism during the pathologic process, and contribution to apoptotic cell death after stroke. As a catabolic mechanism, mitophagy links numbers of a complex network of mitochondria, and affects mitochondrial dynamic process, fusion and fission, reducing mitochondrial production of ROS, mediated by the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (MPTP). The precise nature of mitophagy’s involvement in stroke, and its underlying molecular mechanisms, have yet to be fully clarified. This review aims to provide a comprehensive overview of the integration of mitochondria with mitophagy, also to introduce and discuss recent advances in the understanding of the potential role, and possible signaling pathway, of mitophagy in the pathological processes of both hemorrhagic and ischemic stroke. The author also provides evidence to explain the dual role of mitophagy in stroke.  相似文献   

6.
Metabolic stages, mitochondria and calcium in hypoxic/ischemic brain damage   总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13  
Kristián T 《Cell calcium》2004,36(3-4):221-233
Cerebral hypoxia/ischemia leads to mitochondrial dysfunction due to lack of oxygen leaving the glycolytic metabolism as a main pathway for ATP production. Inhibition of mitochondrial respiration thus triggers generation of lactate and hydrogen ions (H+), and furthermore dramatically reduces ATP generation leading to disregulation of cellular ion metabolism with subsequent intracellular calcium accumulation. Upon reperfusion, when mitochondrial dysfunction is (at least partially) reversed by restoring cerebral oxygen supply, bioenergetic metabolism recovers and brain cells are able to re-institute their normal ionic homeostatic mechanisms. However, the initial restoration of normal mitochondrial function may be only transient and followed by a secondary, delayed perturbation of mitochondrial respiratory performance seen as a decrease in cellular ATP levels and known as "secondary energy failure". There have been several mechanisms considered responsible for delayed post-ischemic mitochondrial failure, the mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT) being one that is considered important. Although the amount of calcium available during early reperfusion in vivo is limited, relative to the amount needed to trigger the MPT in vitro; the additional intracellular conditions (of acidosis, high phosphate, and low adenine nucleotideae levels) prevailing during reperfusion, favor MPT pore opening in vivo. Furthermore, the cellular redistribution and/or changes in the intracellular levels of pro-apoptotic proteins can alter mitochondrial function and initiate apoptotic cell death. Thus, mitochondria seem play an important role in orchestrating cell death mechanisms following hypoxia/ischemia. However, it is still not clear which are the key mechanisms that cause mitochondrial dysfunction and lead ultimately to cell death, and which have more secondary nature to brain damage acting as aggravating factors.  相似文献   

7.
Reactive oxygen species contribute to the tissue injury seen after reperfusion of ischemic myocardium. We propose that toxicity originates from the effect that mitochondrial peroxide metabolism has on substrate entry into oxidative pathways. To support our contention, cultured adult rat cardiomyocytes were incubated with physiological concentrations of peroxide. The cellular extract and incubation medium were analyzed for adenine nucleotides and purines by reverse-phase high-pressure liquid chromatography. Cellular glutathione efflux was determined by enzymatic analysis of the incubation medium. Pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) activity was determined in the cultured myocytes as well as in freshly isolated cardiac mitochondria using [1-C14]pyruvate. Extracellular glutathione rose 3.3-fold in response to small doses of peroxide (approximately 108 nmol/mg protein). Likewise, small quantities of peroxide reduced total cellular adenine nucleotides to 50-60% of control values with only a modest (0.95-0.91) reduction in energy charge [ATP + 1/2 ADP)/(ATP + ADP + AMP]. Peroxide-treated myocytes selectively release inosine and adenosine, as only these two purine degradation products were detected in the incubation medium. The most dramatic response was a peroxide dose-dependent inhibition of PDH activity in cultured myocytes as well as freshly isolated mitochondria; just 65 and 30 nmol peroxide/mg protein induced a 50% reduction in cellular and mitochondrial PDH activity, respectively. In conclusion, physiological quantities of peroxide potently inhibit PDH in cultured cardiomyocytes and isolated cardiac mitochondria. PDH inhibition blocks the aerobic oxidation of glucose and inhibits the oxidative phosphorylation of ADP, which in turn leads to cellular adenine nucleotide degradation.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of exogenous fatty acids and hypoxia on cardiac energy metabolism were studied by measuring mitochondrial and cytosolic adenine nucleotides as well as CoA and carnitine esters using a tissue fractionation technique in non-aqueous solvents. During normoxia, the administration of 0.5 mM palmitate caused a considerable increase in acyl-CoA and acylcarnitine, particularly in mitochondria. High-energy phosphates, however, were only slightly altered. A 90 min low-flow hypoxia caused a dramatic increase in mitochondrial acyl esters. The mitochondrial ATP content decreased significantly, while the cytosolic concentration was only slightly diminished, suggesting an inhibition of mitochondrial adenine nucleotide translocation by long-chain acyl-CoA. Addition of palmitate during hypoxia amplified hypoxic damage and reduced adenine nucleotides in both compartments considerably, while fatty acid metabolites were only slightly affected. In presence of an inhibitor of fatty acid oxidation (BM 42.304), the fatty-acid-induced acceleration of cardiac injury was prevented. Since BM 42.304 decreased mitochondrial acylcarnitine and increased the cytosolic concentration significantly, BM 42.304 was presumed to inhibit mitochondrial acylcarnitine translocase. However, a causal relationship between lipid metabolites and ischemic damage seemed unlikely.  相似文献   

9.
Both reactive dopamine metabolites and mitochondrial dysfunction have been implicated in the neurodegeneration of Parkinson's disease. Dopamine metabolites, dopamine quinone and reactive oxygen species, can directly alter protein function by oxidative modifications, and several mitochondrial proteins may be targets of this oxidative damage. In this study, we examined, using isolated brain mitochondria, whether dopamine oxidation products alter mitochondrial function. We found that exposure to dopamine quinone caused a large increase in mitochondrial resting state 4 respiration. This effect was prevented by GSH but not superoxide dismutase and catalase. In contrast, exposure to dopamine and monoamine oxidase-generated hydrogen peroxide resulted in a decrease in active state 3 respiration. This inhibition was prevented by both pargyline and catalase. We also examined the effects of dopamine oxidation products on the opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore, which has been implicated in neuronal cell death. Dopamine oxidation to dopamine quinone caused a significant increase in swelling of brain and liver mitochondria. This was inhibited by both the pore inhibitor cyclosporin A and GSH, suggesting that swelling was due to pore opening and related to dopamine quinone formation. In contrast, dopamine and endogenous monoamine oxidase had no effect on mitochondrial swelling. These findings suggest that mitochondrial dysfunction induced by products of dopamine oxidation may be involved in neurodegenerative conditions such as Parkinson's disease and methamphetamine-induced neurotoxicity.  相似文献   

10.
To provide insights into the effects of temporary focal ischemia on the function of neurons and astrocytes in vivo, we measured the incorporation of radiolabel from [U-14C]glucose into both glutamate and glutamine in brain subregions at 1 h of reperfusion following occlusion of the middle cerebral artery for 2 or 3 h. Under the experimental conditions used, 14C-glutamate is mainly produced in neurons whereas 14C-glutamine is generated in astrocytes from 14C-glutamate of both neuronal and astrocytic origin. Radiolabel incorporation into both amino acids was greatly decreased. The change in 14C-glutamate accumulation provides strong evidence for substantial reductions in neuronal glucose metabolism. The resulting decrease in delivery of 14C-glutamate from the neurons to astrocytes was probably also the major contributor to the change in 14C-glutamine content. These alterations probably result in part from a marked depression of glycolytic activity in the neurons, as suggested by previous studies assessing deoxyglucose utilization. Alterations in 14C-glucose metabolism were not restricted to tissue that would subsequently become infarcted. Thus, these changes did not inevitably lead to death of the affected cells. The ATP : ADP ratio and phosphocreatine content were essentially preserved during recirculation following 2 h of ischemia and showed at most only moderate losses in some subregions following 3 h of ischemia. This retention of energy reserves despite the decreases in 14C-glucose metabolism in neurons suggests that energy needs were substantially reduced in the post-ischemic brain. Marked increases in tissue lactate accumulation during recirculation, particularly following 3 h of ischemia, provided evidence that impaired pyruvate oxidation probably also contributed to the altered 14C-glucose metabolism. These findings indicate the presence of complex changes in energy metabolism that are likely to greatly influence the responses of neurons and astrocytes to temporary focal ischemia.  相似文献   

11.
Glutamate excitotoxicity, oxidative stress, and acidosis are primary mediators of neuronal death during ischemia and reperfusion. Astrocytes influence these processes in several ways. Glutamate uptake by astrocytes normally prevents excitotoxic glutamate elevations in brain extracellular space, and this process appears to be a critical determinant of neuronal survival in the ischemic penumbra. Conversely, glutamate efflux from astrocytes by reversal of glutamate uptake, volume sensitive organic ion channels, and other routes may contribute to extracellular glutamate elevations. Glutamate activation of neuronal N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptors is modulated by glycine and D-serine: both of these neuromodulators are transported by astrocytes, and D-serine production is localized exclusively to astrocytes. Astrocytes influence neuronal antioxidant status through release of ascorbate and uptake of its oxidized form, dehydroascorbate, and by indirectly supporting neuronal glutathione metabolism. In addition, glutathione in astrocytes can serve as a sink for nitric oxide and thereby reduce neuronal oxidant stress during ischemia. Astrocytes probably also influence neuronal survival in the post-ischemic period. Reactive astrocytes secrete nitric oxide, TNFalpha, matrix metalloproteinases, and other factors that can contribute to delayed neuronal death, and facilitate brain edema via aquaporin-4 channels localized to the astrocyte endfoot-endothelial interface. On the other hand erythropoietin, a paracrine messenger in brain, is produced by astrocytes and upregulated after ischemia. Erythropoietin stimulates the Janus kinase-2 (JAK-2) and nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kB) signaling pathways in neurons to prevent programmed cell death after ischemic or excitotoxic stress. Astrocytes also secrete several angiogenic and neurotrophic factors that are important for vascular and neuronal regeneration after stroke.  相似文献   

12.
Normal differentiated cells rely primarily on mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation to produce adenosine triphosphate (ATP) to maintain their viability and functions by using three major bioenergetic fuels: glucose, glutamine and fatty acids. Many cancer cells, however, rely on aerobic glycolysis for their growth and survival, and recent studies indicate that some cancer cells depend on glutamine as well. This altered metabolism in cancers occurs through oncogene activation or loss of tumor suppressor genes in multiple signaling pathways, including the phosphoinositide 3-kinase and Myc pathways. Relatively little is known, however, about the role of fatty acids as a bioenergetic fuel in growth and survival of cancer cells. Here, we report that human glioblastoma SF188 cells oxidize fatty acids and that inhibition of fatty acid β-oxidation by etomoxir, a carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1 inhibitor, markedly reduces cellular ATP levels and viability. We also found that inhibition of fatty acid oxidation controls the NADPH level. In the presence of reactive oxygen species scavenger tiron, however, ATP depletion is prevented without restoring fatty acid oxidation. This suggests that oxidative stress may lead to bioenergetic failure and cell death. Our work provides evidence that mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation may provide NADPH for defense against oxidative stress and prevent ATP loss and cell death.  相似文献   

13.
Skeletal muscle of insulin resistant individuals is characterized by lower fasting lipid oxidation and reduced ability to switch between lipid and glucose oxidation. The purpose of the present study was to examine if chronic hyperglycemia would impair metabolic switching of myotubes. Human myotubes were treated with or without chronic hyperglycemia (20 mmol/l glucose for 4 days), and metabolism of [14C]oleic acid (OA) and [14C]glucose was studied. Myotubes exposed to chronic hyperglycemia showed a significantly reduced OA uptake and oxidation to CO2, whereas acid-soluble metabolites were increased compared to normoglycemic cells (5.5 mmol/l glucose). Glucose suppressibility, the ability of acute glucose (5 mmol/l) to suppress lipid oxidation, was 50% in normoglycemic cells and reduced to 21% by hyperglycemia. Adaptability, the capacity to increase lipid oxidation with increasing fatty acid availability, was not affected by hyperglycemia. Glucose uptake and oxidation were reduced by about 40% after hyperglycemia, and oxidation of glucose in presence of mitochondrial uncouplers showed that net and maximal oxidative capacities were significantly reduced. Hyperglycemia also abolished insulin-stimulated glucose uptake. Moreover, ATP concentration was reduced by 25% after hyperglycemia. However, none of the measured mitochondrial genes were downregulated nor was mitochondrial DNA content. Microarray and real-time RT-PCR showed that no genes were significantly regulated by chronic hyperglycemia. Addition of chronic lactate reduced both glucose and OA oxidation to the same extent as hyperglycemia. In conclusion, chronic hyperglycemia reduced substrate oxidation in skeletal muscle cells and impaired metabolic switching. The effect is most likely due to an induced mitochondrial dysfunction.  相似文献   

14.
Energy metabolism in the adult brain consumes large quantities of glucose, but little is known to date regarding how glucose metabolism changes during neuronal differentiation, a process that is highly demanding energetically. We studied changes in glucose metabolism during neuronal differentiation of P19 mouse embryonal carcinoma cells, E14Tg2A embryonic stem cells as well as during brain development of BLC57 mice. In all these models, we find that neurogenesis is accompanied by a shift from oxidative to fermentative glucose metabolism. This shift is accompanied by both a decrease in mitochondrial enzymatic activities and mitochondrial uncoupling. In keeping with this finding, we also observe that differentiation does not require oxidative metabolism, as indicated by experiments demonstrating that the process is preserved in cells treated with the ATP synthase inhibitor oligomycin. Overall, we provide evidence that neuronal differentiation involves a shift from oxidative to fermentative metabolism, and that oxidative phosphorylation is not essential for this process.  相似文献   

15.
Stroke is a leading cause of death and disability, but most of the therapeutic approaches failed in clinical trials. The energy metabolism alterations, due to marked ATP decline, are strongly related to stroke and, at present, their physiopathological roles are not fully understood. Thus, the aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of aging on ischemia-induced changes in energy mitochondrial transduction and the consequences on overall brain energy metabolism in an in vivo experimental model of complete cerebral ischemia of 15 min duration and during post-ischemic recirculation after 1, 24, 48, 72 and 96 h, in 1 year “adult” and 2 year-old “aged” rats.  相似文献   

16.
Cancer cell metabolism is largely controlled by oncogenic signals and nutrient availability. Here, we highlighted that the glucocorticoid-induced leucine zipper (GILZ), an intracellular protein influencing many signaling pathways, reprograms cancer cell metabolism to promote proliferation. We provided evidence that GILZ overexpression induced a significant increase of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation as evidenced by the augmentation in basal respiration, ATP-linked respiration as well as respiratory capacity. Pharmacological inhibition of glucose, glutamine and fatty acid oxidation reduced the activation of GILZ-induced mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. At glycolysis level, GILZ-overexpressing cells enhanced the expression of glucose transporters in their plasmatic membrane and showed higher glycolytic reserve. 1H NMR metabolites quantification showed an up-regulation of amino acid biosynthesis. The GILZ-induced metabolic reprograming is present in various cancer cell lines regardless of their driver mutations status and is associated with higher proliferation rates persisting under metabolic stress conditions. Interestingly, high levels of OXPHOS made GILZ-overexpressing cells vulnerable to cell death induced by mitochondrial pro-oxidants. Altogether, these data indicate that GILZ reprograms cancer metabolism towards mitochondrial OXPHOS and sensitizes cancer cells to mitochondria-targeted drugs with pro-oxidant activities.  相似文献   

17.
A defect in cerebral energy production due to dysfunction of the mitochondrial electron transport system (ETS) has been postulated to be important in the pathogenesis of Parkinson Disease (PD). However, direct in vivo measurements of cerebral mitochondrial function are scant and inconsistent. We directly investigated cerebral mitochondrial function in vivo with positron emission tomography (PET) in 12 patients with early, never-medicated PD and 12 age-matched normal controls by combined measurements of the cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen (CMRO2) and the cerebral metabolic rate of glucose (CMRglc). Instead of the decrease in CMRO2 and CMRO2/CMRglc molar ratio characteristic of defects in mitochondrial oxidative metabolism, there was a statistically significant 24% general increase in CMRO2 and no change in CMRO2/CMRglc. Since PD symptoms were already manifest, reduced oxidative activity of the mitochondrial ETS cannot be a primary mechanism of neuronal death in early PD. This increase in metabolism could reflect the increased energy requirements of an injured brain or an uncoupling of ATP production from oxidation in the terminal stage of oxidative phosphorylation. Which is the case in early PD and whether these metabolic abnormalities are important in the pathogenesis of PD will require further study.  相似文献   

18.
Immunity and inflammation are key elements of the pathobiology of stroke, a devastating illness second only to cardiac ischemia as a cause of death worldwide. The immune system participates in the brain damage produced by ischemia, and the damaged brain, in turn, exerts an immunosuppressive effect that promotes fatal infections that threaten the survival of people after stroke. Inflammatory signaling is involved in all stages of the ischemic cascade, from the early damaging events triggered by arterial occlusion to the late regenerative processes underlying post-ischemic tissue repair. Recent developments have revealed that stroke engages both innate and adaptive immunity. But adaptive immunity triggered by newly exposed brain antigens does not have an impact on the acute phase of the damage. Nevertheless, modulation of adaptive immunity exerts a remarkable protective effect on the ischemic brain and offers the prospect of new stroke therapies. As immunomodulation is not devoid of deleterious side effects, a better understanding of the reciprocal interaction between the immune system and the ischemic brain is essential to harness the full therapeutic potential of the immunology of stroke.  相似文献   

19.
In order to investigate the potential neuroprotective role played by glucose metabolism during brain oxygen deprivation, the susceptibility of cultured neurones and astrocytes to 1 h of oxygen deprivation (hypoxia) or oxygen and glucose deprivation (OGD) was examined. OGD, but not hypoxia, promotes dihydrorhodamine 123 and glutathione oxidation in neurones but not in astrocytes reflecting free radical generation in the former cells. A specific loss of mitochondrial complex-I activity, mitochondrial membrane potential collapse, ATP depletion and necrosis occurred in the OGD neurones, but not in the OGD astrocytes. Furthermore, superoxide anion but not nitric oxide formation was responsible for these effects. OGD decreased neuronal but not astrocytic NADPH concentrations; this was not observed in hypoxia and was independent of superoxide or nitric oxide formation. These results suggest that glucose metabolism would supply NADPH, through the pentose-phosphate pathway, aimed at preventing oxidative stress, mitochondrial damage and neurotoxicity during oxygen deprivation to neural cells.  相似文献   

20.
Successful stem cell therapy requires the optimal proliferation, engraftment, and differentiation of stem cells into the desired cell lineage of tissues. However, stem cell therapy clinical trials to date have had limited success, suggesting that a better understanding of stem cell biology is needed. This includes a better understanding of stem cell energy metabolism because of the importance of energy metabolism in stem cell proliferation and differentiation. We report here the first direct evidence that human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cell (BMMSC) energy metabolism is highly glycolytic with low rates of mitochondrial oxidative metabolism. The contribution of glycolysis to ATP production is greater than 97% in undifferentiated BMMSCs, while glucose and fatty acid oxidation combined only contribute 3% of ATP production. We also assessed the effect of physiological levels of fatty acids on human BMMSC survival and energy metabolism. We found that the saturated fatty acid palmitate induces BMMSC apoptosis and decreases proliferation, an effect prevented by the unsaturated fatty acid oleate. Interestingly, chronic exposure of human BMMSCs to physiological levels of palmitate (for 24 hr) reduces palmitate oxidation rates. This decrease in palmitate oxidation is prevented by chronic exposure of the BMMSCs to oleate. These results suggest that reducing saturated fatty acid oxidation can decrease human BMMSC proliferation and cause cell death. These results also suggest that saturated fatty acids may be involved in the long-term impairment of BMMSC survival in vivo.  相似文献   

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