Role of Cardiac AMP-Activated Protein Kinase in a Non-pathological Setting: Evidence From Cardiomyocyte-Specific, Inducible AMP-Activated Protein Kinase α1α2-Knockout Mice.

Tokarska-Schlattner, Malgorzata; Kay, Laurence; Perret, Pascale; Isola, Raffaella; Attia, Stéphane; Lamarche, Frédéric; Tellier, Cindy; Cottet-Rousselle, Cécile; Uneisi, Amjad; Hininger-Favier, Isabelle; Foretz, Marc; Dubouchaud, Hervé; Ghezzi, Catherine; Zuppinger, Christian; Viollet, Benoit; Schlattner, Uwe (2021). Role of Cardiac AMP-Activated Protein Kinase in a Non-pathological Setting: Evidence From Cardiomyocyte-Specific, Inducible AMP-Activated Protein Kinase α1α2-Knockout Mice. Frontiers in cell and developmental biology, 9, p. 731015. Frontiers 10.3389/fcell.2021.731015

[img]
Preview
Text
fcell-09-731015.pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons: Attribution (CC-BY).

Download (5MB) | Preview

AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a key regulator of energy homeostasis under conditions of energy stress. Though heart is one of the most energy requiring organs and depends on a perfect match of energy supply with high and fluctuating energy demand to maintain its contractile performance, the role of AMPK in this organ is still not entirely clear, in particular in a non-pathological setting. In this work, we characterized cardiomyocyte-specific, inducible AMPKα1 and α2 knockout mice (KO), where KO was induced at the age of 8 weeks, and assessed their phenotype under physiological conditions. In the heart of KO mice, both AMPKα isoforms were strongly reduced and thus deleted in a large part of cardiomyocytes already 2 weeks after tamoxifen administration, persisting during the entire study period. AMPK KO had no effect on heart function at baseline, but alterations were observed under increased workload induced by dobutamine stress, consistent with lower endurance exercise capacity observed in AMPK KO mice. AMPKα deletion also induced a decrease in basal metabolic rate (oxygen uptake, energy expenditure) together with a trend to lower locomotor activity of AMPK KO mice 12 months after tamoxifen administration. Loss of AMPK resulted in multiple alterations of cardiac mitochondria: reduced respiration with complex I substrates as measured in isolated mitochondria, reduced activity of complexes I and IV, and a shift in mitochondrial cristae morphology from lamellar to mixed lamellar-tubular. A strong tendency to diminished ATP and glycogen level was observed in older animals, 1 year after tamoxifen administration. Our study suggests important roles of cardiac AMPK at increased cardiac workload, potentially limiting exercise performance. This is at least partially due to impaired mitochondrial function and bioenergetics which degrades with age.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > Department of Cardiovascular Disorders (DHGE) > Clinic of Cardiology

UniBE Contributor:

Zuppinger, Christian

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health
500 Science > 570 Life sciences; biology

ISSN:

2296-634X

Publisher:

Frontiers

Funders:

[UNSPECIFIED] French National Research Agency

Language:

English

Submitter:

Christian Zuppinger

Date Deposited:

20 Jan 2022 10:56

Last Modified:

05 Dec 2022 16:03

Publisher DOI:

10.3389/fcell.2021.731015

PubMed ID:

34733845

Uncontrolled Keywords:

AMP-activated protein kinase AMPK conditional inducible KO energetics exercise heart mitochondria

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/164350

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/164350

Actions (login required)

Edit item Edit item
Provide Feedback