TY - JOUR
T1 - Intact mitochondrial substrate efflux is essential for prevention of tubular injury in a sex-dependent manner
AU - McCrimmon, Allison
AU - Cahill, Kerin M.
AU - Kruger, Claudia
AU - Mangelli, Margaret E.
AU - Bouffard, Emily
AU - Dobroski, Timothy
AU - Michanczyk, Kelly N.
AU - Burke, Susan J.
AU - Noland, Robert C.
AU - Ilatovskaya, Daria V.
AU - Stadler, Krisztian
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors would like to thank Nancy Smythe (MUSC) for excellent technical assistance on transmission electron microscopy and Sara Webb and Richard Carmouche for NGS. This project was supported in part by NIH R01 DK115749 (KS), DK103860 (RCN), HL148114 (DVI), and P20GM135002 (SJB). The work utilized various core facilities at Pennington Biomedical, including the Cell Biology and Bioimaging Core, Genomics Core, and Transgenics Core, which are supported through the program project mechanisms of COBRE (P20GM103528) and NORC (P30DK072476) center grants (NIH).
Publisher Copyright:
Copyright: © 2022, McCrimmon et al.
PY - 2022/4/8
Y1 - 2022/4/8
N2 - The importance of healthy mitochondrial function is implicated in the prevention of chronic kidney disease (CKD) and diabetic kidney disease (DKD). Sex differences also play important roles in DKD. Our previous studies revealed that mitochondrial substrate overload (modeled by homozygous deletion of carnitine acetyl-transferase [CrAT]) in proximal tubules causes renal injury. Here, we demonstrate the importance of intact mitochondrial substrate efflux by titrating the amount of overload through the generation of a heterozygous CrAT-KO model (PT-CrATHET mouse). Intriguingly, these animals developed renal injury similarly to their homozygous counterparts. Mitochondria were structurally and functionally impaired in both sexes. Transcriptomic analyses, however, revealed striking sex differences. Male mice shut down fatty acid oxidation and several other metabolism-related pathways. Female mice had a significantly weaker transcriptional response in metabolism, but activation of inflammatory pathways was prominent. Proximal tubular cells from PT-CrATHET mice of both sexes exhibited a shift toward a more glycolytic phenotype, but female mice were still able to oxidize fatty acid–based substrates. Our results demonstrate that maintaining mitochondrial substrate metabolism balance is crucial to satisfying proximal tubular energy demand. Our findings have potentially broad implications, as both the glycolytic shift and the sexual dimorphisms discovered herein offer potentially new modalities for future interventions for treating kidney disease.
AB - The importance of healthy mitochondrial function is implicated in the prevention of chronic kidney disease (CKD) and diabetic kidney disease (DKD). Sex differences also play important roles in DKD. Our previous studies revealed that mitochondrial substrate overload (modeled by homozygous deletion of carnitine acetyl-transferase [CrAT]) in proximal tubules causes renal injury. Here, we demonstrate the importance of intact mitochondrial substrate efflux by titrating the amount of overload through the generation of a heterozygous CrAT-KO model (PT-CrATHET mouse). Intriguingly, these animals developed renal injury similarly to their homozygous counterparts. Mitochondria were structurally and functionally impaired in both sexes. Transcriptomic analyses, however, revealed striking sex differences. Male mice shut down fatty acid oxidation and several other metabolism-related pathways. Female mice had a significantly weaker transcriptional response in metabolism, but activation of inflammatory pathways was prominent. Proximal tubular cells from PT-CrATHET mice of both sexes exhibited a shift toward a more glycolytic phenotype, but female mice were still able to oxidize fatty acid–based substrates. Our results demonstrate that maintaining mitochondrial substrate metabolism balance is crucial to satisfying proximal tubular energy demand. Our findings have potentially broad implications, as both the glycolytic shift and the sexual dimorphisms discovered herein offer potentially new modalities for future interventions for treating kidney disease.
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U2 - 10.1172/jci.insight.150696
DO - 10.1172/jci.insight.150696
M3 - Article
C2 - 35230975
AN - SCOPUS:85128248434
SN - 2379-3708
VL - 7
JO - JCI insight
JF - JCI insight
IS - 7
M1 - e150696
ER -