Enhanced hepatic respiratory capacity and altered lipid metabolism support metabolic homeostasis during short-term hypoxic stress.
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Authors
McNally, Ben D
Sowton, Alice P
Murgia, Antonio
Armitage, James
Thomas, Luke W
Krause, Fynn N
Maddalena, Lucas A
Francis, Ian
Kavanagh, Stefan
Williams, Dominic P
Griffin, Julian L
Lyon, Jonathan J
Publication Date
2021-12-15Journal Title
BMC Biol
ISSN
1741-7007
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Type
Article
This Version
AM
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
O'Brien, K., McNally, B. D., Sowton, A. P., Murgia, A., Armitage, J., Thomas, L. W., Krause, F. N., et al. (2021). Enhanced hepatic respiratory capacity and altered lipid metabolism support metabolic homeostasis during short-term hypoxic stress.. BMC Biol https://doi.org/10.1186/s12915-021-01192-0
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tissue hypoxia is a key feature of several endemic hepatic diseases, including alcoholic and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, and organ failure. Hypoxia imposes a severe metabolic challenge on the liver, potentially disrupting its capacity to carry out essential functions including fuel storage and the integration of lipid metabolism at the whole-body level. Mitochondrial respiratory function is understood to be critical in mediating the hepatic hypoxic response, yet the time-dependent nature of this response and the role of the respiratory chain in this remain unclear. RESULTS: Here, we report that hepatic respiratory capacity is enhanced following short-term exposure to hypoxia (2 days, 10% O2) and is associated with increased abundance of the respiratory chain supercomplex III2+IV and increased cardiolipin levels. Suppression of this enhanced respiratory capacity, achieved via mild inhibition of mitochondrial complex III, disrupted metabolic homeostasis. Hypoxic exposure for 2 days led to accumulation of plasma and hepatic long chain acyl-carnitines. This was observed alongside depletion of hepatic triacylglycerol species with total chain lengths of 39-53 carbons, containing palmitic, palmitoleic, stearic, and oleic acids, which are associated with de novo lipogenesis. The changes to hepatic respiratory capacity and lipid metabolism following 2 days hypoxic exposure were transient, becoming resolved after 14 days in line with systemic acclimation to hypoxia and elevated circulating haemoglobin concentrations. CONCLUSIONS: The liver maintains metabolic homeostasis in response to shorter term hypoxic exposure through transient enhancement of respiratory chain capacity and alterations to lipid metabolism. These findings may have implications in understanding and treating hepatic pathologies associated with hypoxia.
Relationships
Is supplemented by: https://doi.org/10.17863/CAM.75680
Sponsorship
GlaxoSmithKline
Funder references
British Heart Foundation (FS/17/61/33473D)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12915-021-01192-0
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/330695
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