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AMP-activated protein kinase-independent inhibition of hepatic mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation by AICA riboside.

Authors :
UCL - MD/BICL - Département de biochimie et de biologie cellulaire
Guigas, Bruno
Taleux, Nellie
Foretz, Marc
Detaille, Dominique
Andreelli, Fabrizio
Viollet, Benoit
Hue, Louis
UCL - MD/BICL - Département de biochimie et de biologie cellulaire
Guigas, Bruno
Taleux, Nellie
Foretz, Marc
Detaille, Dominique
Andreelli, Fabrizio
Viollet, Benoit
Hue, Louis
Source :
The Biochemical journal, Vol. 404, no. 3, p. 499-507 (2007)
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

AICA riboside (5-aminoimidazole-4-carboxamide-1-beta-D-ribofuranoside) has been extensively used in cells to activate the AMPK (AMP-activated protein kinase), a metabolic sensor involved in cell energy homoeostasis. In the present study, we investigated the effects of AICA riboside on mitochondrial oxidative; phosphorylation. AICA riboside was found to dose-dependently inhibit the oligomycin-sensitive JO2 (oxygen consumption rate) of isolated rat hepatocytes. A decrease in P(i) (inorganic phosphate), ATP, AMP and total adenine nucleotide contents was also observed with AICA riboside concentrations >0.1 mM. Interestingly, in hepatocytes from mice lacking both alpha1 and alpha2 AMPK catalytic subunits, basal JO2 and expression of several mitochondrial proteins were significantly reduced compared with wild-type mice, suggesting that mitochondrial biogenesis was perturbed. However, inhibition of JO2 by AICA riboside was still present in the mutant mice and thus was clearly not mediated by AMPK. In permeabilized hepatocytes, this inhibition was no longer evident, suggesting that it could be due to intracellular accumulation of Z nucleotides and/or loss of adenine nucleotides and P(i). ZMP did indeed inhibit respiration in isolated rat mitochondria through a direct effect on the respiratory-chain complex I. In addition, inhibition of JO2 by AICA riboside was also potentiated in cells incubated with fructose to deplete adenine nucleotides and P(i). We conclude that AICA riboside inhibits cellular respiration by an AMPK-independent mechanism that likely results from the combined intracellular P(i) depletion and ZMP accumulation. Our data also demonstrate that the cellular effects of AICA riboside are not necessarily caused by AMPK activation and that their interpretation should be taken with caution.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
The Biochemical journal, Vol. 404, no. 3, p. 499-507 (2007)
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1130584183
Document Type :
Electronic Resource