info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Alcohol hangover effects on brain cortex non-synaptic mitochondria and synaptosomes bioenergetics
Fecha
2019-03Registro en:
Karadayian, Analia Graciela; Lombardi, Paulina; Bustamante, Juanita; Lores Arnaiz, Silvia; Alcohol hangover effects on brain cortex non-synaptic mitochondria and synaptosomes bioenergetics; Elsevier Science Inc; Alcohol; 77; 3-2019; 113-123
0741-8329
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Karadayian, Analia Graciela
Lombardi, Paulina
Bustamante, Juanita
Lores Arnaiz, Silvia
Resumen
Alcohol hangover (AH) has been associated with oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction. We herein postulate that AH-induced mitochondrial alterations can be due to a different pattern of response in synaptosomes and non-synaptic (NS) mitochondria. Mice received intraperitoneal (i.p.) injections of ethanol (3.8 g/kg) or saline and were sacrificed 6 h afterward. Brain cortex NS mitochondria and synaptosomes were isolated by Ficoll gradient. Oxygen consumption rates were measured in NS mitochondria and synaptosomes by high-resolution respirometry. Results showed that NS-synaptic mitochondria from AH animals presented a 26% decrease in malate-glutamate state 3 respiration, a 64% reduction in ATP content, 28-37% decrements in ATP production rates (malate-glutamate or succinate-dependent, respectively), and 44% inhibition in complex IV activity. No changes were observed in mitochondrial transmembrane potential (ΔΨ) or in UCP-2 expression in NS-mitochondria. Synaptosome respiration driving proton leak (in the presence of oligomycin), and spare respiratory capacity (percentage ratio between maximum and basal respiration) were 30% and 15% increased in hangover condition, respectively. Synaptosomal ATP content was 26% decreased, and ATP production rates were 40?55% decreased (malate-glutamate or succinate-dependent, respectively) in AH mice. In addition, a 24% decrease in ΔΨ and a 21% increase in UCP-2 protein expression were observed in synaptosomes from AH mice. Moreover, mitochondrial respiratory complexes I?III, II?III, and IV activities measured in synaptosomes from AH mice were decreased by 18%, 34%, and 50%, respectively. Results of this study reveal that alterations in bioenergetics status during AH could be mainly due to changes in mitochondrial function at the level of synapses.