Dietary nitrate preserves mitochondrial bioenergetics and mitochondrial protein synthesis rates during short-term immobilization in mice

Heather L. Petrick*, Rachel M. Handy, Bayley Vachon, Sara M. Frangos, Andrew M. Holwerda, Annemarie P. Gijsen, Joan M. Senden, Luc J. C. van Loon, Graham P. Holloway*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Skeletal muscle disuse reduces muscle protein synthesis rates and induces atrophy, events associated with decreased mitochondrial respiration and increased reactive oxygen species. Given that dietary nitrate can improve mitochondrial bioenergetics, we examined whether nitrate supplementation attenuates disuse-induced impairments in mitochondrial function and muscle protein synthesis rates. Female C57Bl/6N mice were subjected to single-limb casting (3 or 7 days) and consumed drinking water with or without 1 mM sodium nitrate. Compared with the contralateral control limb, 3 days of immobilization lowered myofibrillar fractional synthesis rates (FSR, P < 0.0001), resulting inmuscle atrophy. Although FSR and mitophagy-related proteins were higher in subsarcolemmal (SS) compared with intermyofibrillar (IMF) mitochondria, immobilization for 3 days decreased FSR in both SS (P= 0.009) and IMF (P= 0.031) mitochondria. Additionally, 3 days of immobilization reduced maximal mitochondrial respiration, decreased mitochondrial protein content, and increased maximal mitochondrial reactive oxygen species emission, without altering mitophagy-related proteins inmuscle homogenate or isolatedmitochondria (SS and IMF). Although nitrate consumption did not attenuate the decline in muscle mass or myofibrillar FSR, intriguingly, nitrate completely prevented immobilization-induced reductions in SS and IMF mitochondrial FSR. In addition, nitrate prevented alterations in mitochondrial content and bioenergetics after both 3 and 7 days of immobilization. However, in contrast to 3 days of immobilization, nitrate did not prevent the decline in SS and IMF mitochondrial FSR after 7 days of immobilization. Therefore, although nitrate supplementation was not sufficient to prevent muscle atrophy, nitrate may represent a promising therapeutic strategy to maintain mitochondrial bioenergetics and transiently preserve mitochondrial protein synthesis rates during short-term muscle disuse.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages18
JournalJournal of Physiology
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 1 Jun 2023

Keywords

  • immobilization
  • intermyofibrillar mitochondria
  • mitochondrial reactive oxygen species
  • mitochondrial respiration
  • nitrate
  • protein synthesis
  • subsarcolemmal mitochondria
  • SKELETAL-MUSCLE MITOCHONDRIA
  • BEETROOT JUICE
  • ANABOLIC RESISTANCE
  • IN-VIVO
  • EXERCISE
  • VASODILATION
  • CROSSTALK
  • EMISSION
  • WEAKNESS
  • ATROPHY

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