Chronic kidney disease and left ventricular diastolic dysfunction (CKD-LVDD) alter cardiac expression of mitochondria-related genes in swine

Transl Res. 2024 Jan 22:S1931-5244(23)00205-0. doi: 10.1016/j.trsl.2023.12.004. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTCardiovascular disease and heart failure doubles in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), but the underlying mechanisms remain obscure. Mitochondria are central to maintaining cellular respiration and modulating cardiomyocyte function. We took advantage of our novel swine model of CKD and left ventricular diastolic dysfunction (CKD-LVDD) to investigate the expression of mitochondria-related genes and potential mechanisms regulating their expression. CKD-LVDD and normal control pigs (n=6/group, 3 males/3 females) were studied for 14 weeks. Renal and cardiac hemodynamics were quantified by multidetector-CT, echocardiography, and pressure-volume loop studies, respectively. Mitochondrial morphology (electron microscopy) and function (Oroboros) were assessed ex vivo. In randomly selected pigs (n=3/group), cardiac mRNA-, MeDIP-, and miRNA-sequencing (seq) were performed to identify mitochondria-related genes and study their pre- and post -transcriptional regulation. CKD-LVDD exhibited cardiac mitochondrial structural abnormalities and elevated mitochondrial H2O2 emission but preserved mitochondrial function. Cardiac mRNA-seq identified 862 mitochondria-related genes, of which 69 were upregulated and 33 downregulated (fold-change ≥2, false discovery rate≤0.05). Functional analysis showed that upregulated genes were primarily implicated in processes associated with ...
Source: Translational Research : the journal of laboratory and clinical medicine - Category: Laboratory Medicine Authors: Source Type: research