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Metabolic reprogramming during hyperammonemia targets mitochondrial function and postmitotic senescence

Authors :
Avinash Kumar
Nicole Welch
Saurabh Mishra
Annette Bellar
Rafaella Nasciemento Silva
Ling Li
Shashi Shekhar Singh
Mary Sharkoff
Alexis Kerr
Aruna Kumar Chelluboyina
Jinendiran Sekar
Amy H. Attaway
Charles Hoppel
Belinda Willard
Gangarao Davuluri
Srinivasan Dasarathy
Source :
JCI Insight, Vol 6, Iss 24 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical investigation, 2021.

Abstract

Ammonia is a cytotoxic metabolite with pleiotropic molecular and metabolic effects, including senescence induction. During dysregulated ammonia metabolism, which occurs in chronic diseases, skeletal muscle becomes a major organ for nonhepatocyte ammonia uptake. Muscle ammonia disposal occurs in mitochondria via cataplerosis of critical intermediary metabolite α-ketoglutarate, a senescence-ameliorating molecule. Untargeted and mitochondrially targeted data were analyzed by multiomics approaches. These analyses were validated experimentally to dissect the specific mitochondrial oxidative defects and functional consequences, including senescence. Responses to ammonia lowering in myotubes and in hyperammonemic portacaval anastomosis rat muscle were studied. Whole-cell transcriptomics integrated with whole-cell, mitochondrial, and tissue proteomics showed distinct temporal clusters of responses with enrichment of oxidative dysfunction and senescence-related pathways/proteins during hyperammonemia and after ammonia withdrawal. Functional and metabolic studies showed defects in electron transport chain complexes I, III, and IV; loss of supercomplex assembly; decreased ATP synthesis; increased free radical generation with oxidative modification of proteins/lipids; and senescence-associated molecular phenotype–increased β-galactosidase activity and expression of p16INK, p21, and p53. These perturbations were partially reversed by ammonia lowering. Dysregulated ammonia metabolism caused reversible mitochondrial dysfunction by transcriptional and translational perturbations in multiple pathways with a distinct skeletal muscle senescence-associated molecular phenotype.

Subjects

Subjects :
Cell biology
Hepatology
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23793708
Volume :
6
Issue :
24
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
JCI Insight
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0ebae34ec55e4a5d9fee0cbae28c8a7f
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.154089