Bioenergetic profile of human coronary artery smooth muscle cells and effect of metabolic intervention.

Bioenergetics of artery smooth muscle cells is critical in cardiovascular health and disease. An acute rise in metabolic demand causes vasodilation in systemic circulation while a chronic shift in bioenergetic profile may lead to vascular diseases. A decrease in intracellular ATP level may trigger p...

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Main Authors: Mingming Yang, Amy E Chadwick, Caroline Dart, Tomoko Kamishima, John M Quayle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5438125?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-caec8bebe72b43ada176d051eb8a56a42020-11-25T01:41:53ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01125e017795110.1371/journal.pone.0177951Bioenergetic profile of human coronary artery smooth muscle cells and effect of metabolic intervention.Mingming YangAmy E ChadwickCaroline DartTomoko KamishimaJohn M QuayleBioenergetics of artery smooth muscle cells is critical in cardiovascular health and disease. An acute rise in metabolic demand causes vasodilation in systemic circulation while a chronic shift in bioenergetic profile may lead to vascular diseases. A decrease in intracellular ATP level may trigger physiological responses while dedifferentiation of contractile smooth muscle cells to a proliferative and migratory phenotype is often observed during pathological processes. Although it is now possible to dissect multiple building blocks of bioenergetic components quantitatively, detailed cellular bioenergetics of artery smooth muscle cells is still largely unknown. Thus, we profiled cellular bioenergetics of human coronary artery smooth muscle cells and effects of metabolic intervention. Mitochondria and glycolysis stress tests utilizing Seahorse technology revealed that mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation accounted for 54.5% of ATP production at rest with the remaining 45.5% due to glycolysis. Stress tests also showed that oxidative phosphorylation and glycolysis can increase to a maximum of 3.5 fold and 1.25 fold, respectively, indicating that the former has a high reserve capacity. Analysis of bioenergetic profile indicated that aging cells have lower resting oxidative phosphorylation and reduced reserve capacity. Intracellular ATP level of a single cell was estimated to be over 1.1 mM. Application of metabolic modulators caused significant changes in mitochondria membrane potential, intracellular ATP level and ATP:ADP ratio. The detailed breakdown of cellular bioenergetics showed that proliferating human coronary artery smooth muscle cells rely more or less equally on oxidative phosphorylation and glycolysis at rest. These cells have high respiratory reserve capacity and low glycolysis reserve capacity. Metabolic intervention influences both intracellular ATP concentration and ATP:ADP ratio, where subtler changes may be detected by the latter.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5438125?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mingming Yang
Amy E Chadwick
Caroline Dart
Tomoko Kamishima
John M Quayle
spellingShingle Mingming Yang
Amy E Chadwick
Caroline Dart
Tomoko Kamishima
John M Quayle
Bioenergetic profile of human coronary artery smooth muscle cells and effect of metabolic intervention.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Mingming Yang
Amy E Chadwick
Caroline Dart
Tomoko Kamishima
John M Quayle
author_sort Mingming Yang
title Bioenergetic profile of human coronary artery smooth muscle cells and effect of metabolic intervention.
title_short Bioenergetic profile of human coronary artery smooth muscle cells and effect of metabolic intervention.
title_full Bioenergetic profile of human coronary artery smooth muscle cells and effect of metabolic intervention.
title_fullStr Bioenergetic profile of human coronary artery smooth muscle cells and effect of metabolic intervention.
title_full_unstemmed Bioenergetic profile of human coronary artery smooth muscle cells and effect of metabolic intervention.
title_sort bioenergetic profile of human coronary artery smooth muscle cells and effect of metabolic intervention.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Bioenergetics of artery smooth muscle cells is critical in cardiovascular health and disease. An acute rise in metabolic demand causes vasodilation in systemic circulation while a chronic shift in bioenergetic profile may lead to vascular diseases. A decrease in intracellular ATP level may trigger physiological responses while dedifferentiation of contractile smooth muscle cells to a proliferative and migratory phenotype is often observed during pathological processes. Although it is now possible to dissect multiple building blocks of bioenergetic components quantitatively, detailed cellular bioenergetics of artery smooth muscle cells is still largely unknown. Thus, we profiled cellular bioenergetics of human coronary artery smooth muscle cells and effects of metabolic intervention. Mitochondria and glycolysis stress tests utilizing Seahorse technology revealed that mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation accounted for 54.5% of ATP production at rest with the remaining 45.5% due to glycolysis. Stress tests also showed that oxidative phosphorylation and glycolysis can increase to a maximum of 3.5 fold and 1.25 fold, respectively, indicating that the former has a high reserve capacity. Analysis of bioenergetic profile indicated that aging cells have lower resting oxidative phosphorylation and reduced reserve capacity. Intracellular ATP level of a single cell was estimated to be over 1.1 mM. Application of metabolic modulators caused significant changes in mitochondria membrane potential, intracellular ATP level and ATP:ADP ratio. The detailed breakdown of cellular bioenergetics showed that proliferating human coronary artery smooth muscle cells rely more or less equally on oxidative phosphorylation and glycolysis at rest. These cells have high respiratory reserve capacity and low glycolysis reserve capacity. Metabolic intervention influences both intracellular ATP concentration and ATP:ADP ratio, where subtler changes may be detected by the latter.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5438125?pdf=render
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