Dynamics of matrix-free Ca2+ in cardiac mitochondria: two components of Ca2+ uptake and role of phosphate buffering |
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Authors: | Wei An-Chi Liu Ting Winslow Raimond L O'Rourke Brian |
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Affiliation: | Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA. |
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Abstract: | Mitochondrial Ca(2+) uptake is thought to provide an important signal to increase energy production to meet demand but, in excess, can also trigger cell death. The mechanisms defining the relationship between total Ca(2+) uptake, changes in mitochondrial matrix free Ca(2+), and the activation of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (PTP) are not well understood. We quantitatively measure changes in [Ca(2+)](out) and [Ca(2+)](mito) during Ca(2+) uptake in isolated cardiac mitochondria and identify two components of Ca(2+) influx. [Ca(2+)](mito) recordings revealed that the first, MCU(mode1), required at least 1 μM Ru360 to be completely inhibited, and responded to small Ca(2+) additions in the range of 0.1 to 2 μM with rapid and large changes in [Ca(2+)](mito). The second component, MCU(mode2), was blocked by 100 nM Ru360 and was responsible for the bulk of total Ca(2+) uptake for large Ca(2+) additions in the range of 2 to 10 μM; however, it had little effect on steady-state [Ca(2+)](mito). MCU(mode1) mediates changes in [Ca(2+)](mito) of 10s of μM, even in the presence of 100 nM Ru360, indicating that there is a finite degree of Ca(2+) buffering in the matrix associated with this pathway. In contrast, the much higher Ca(2+) loads evoked by MCU(mode2) activate a secondary dynamic Ca(2+) buffering system consistent with calcium-phosphate complex formation. Increasing P(i) potentiated [Ca(2+)](mito) increases via MCU(mode1) but suppressed [Ca(2+)](mito) changes via MCU(mode2). The results suggest that the role of MCU(mode1) might be to modulate oxidative phosphorylation in response to intracellular Ca(2+) signaling, whereas MCU(mode2) and the dynamic high-capacity Ca(2+) buffering system constitute a Ca(2+) sink function. Interestingly, the trigger for PTP activation is unlikely to be [Ca(2+)](mito) itself but rather a downstream byproduct of total mitochondrial Ca(2+) loading. |
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