Litcius/Paper detail

The effects of UCP2 on autophagy through the AMPK signaling pathway in septic cardiomyopathy and the underlying mechanism

Jiayu Mao, Longxiang Su, Dongkai Li, Hongmin Zhang, Xiaoting Wang, Dawei Liu

2021Annals of Translational Medicine26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mitochondrial dysfunction plays an important role in the development of septic cardiomyopathy. This study aimed to reveal the protective role of uncoupling protein 2 (UCP2) in mitochondria through AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) on autophagy during septic cardiomyopathy. METHODS: were used to study the effect. The myocardial morphological alterations, indicators of mitochondrial injury and levels of autophagy-associated proteins (pAMPK, pmTOR, pULK1, pTSC2, Beclin-1, and LC3-I/II) were assessed. In addition, the mechanism of the interaction between UCP2 and AMPK was further studied through gain- and loss-of-function studies. RESULTS: Compared with the wild-type mice, the UCP2 knockout mice exhibited more severe cardiomyocyte injury after CLP, and the AMPK agonist AICAR protected against such injury. Consistent with this result, silencing UCP2 augmented the LPS-induced pathological damage and mitochondrial injury in the H9C2 cells, limited the upregulation of autophagy proteins and reduced AMPK phosphorylation. AICAR protected the cells from morphological changes and mitochondrial membrane potential loss and promoted autophagy. The silencing and overexpression of UCP2 led to correlated changes in the AMPK upstream kinases pLKB1 and CAMKK2. CONCLUSIONS: UCP2 exerts cardioprotective effects on mitochondrial dysfunction during sepsis via the action of AMPK on autophagy.

Topics & Concepts

AutophagyAMPKAMP-activated protein kinaseCell biologyProtein kinase AMitochondrionATG16L1PhosphorylationDiabetic cardiomyopathyULK1ChemistryCardiomyopathyCancer researchBiologyMedicineInternal medicineApoptosisBiochemistryHeart failureAutophagy in Disease and TherapyAdipose Tissue and MetabolismMitochondrial Function and Pathology