Mitochondrial dysfunction may explain the cardiomyopathy of chronic iron overload

X Gao, M Qian, JL Campian, J Marshall, Z Zhou… - Free Radical Biology …, 2010 - Elsevier
X Gao, M Qian, JL Campian, J Marshall, Z Zhou, AM Roberts, YJ Kang, SD Prabhu, XF Sun…
Free Radical Biology and Medicine, 2010Elsevier
In patients with hemochromatosis, cardiac dysfunction may appear years after they have
reached a state of iron overload. We hypothesized that cumulative iron-catalyzed oxidant
damage to mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) might explain the cardiomyopathy of chronic iron
overload. Mice were given repetitive injections of iron dextran for a total of 4weeks after
which the iron-loaded mice had elevated cardiac iron, modest cardiac hypertrophy, and
cardiac dysfunction. qPCR amplification of near-full-length (∼ 16kb) mtDNA revealed> 50 …
In patients with hemochromatosis, cardiac dysfunction may appear years after they have reached a state of iron overload. We hypothesized that cumulative iron-catalyzed oxidant damage to mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) might explain the cardiomyopathy of chronic iron overload. Mice were given repetitive injections of iron dextran for a total of 4weeks after which the iron-loaded mice had elevated cardiac iron, modest cardiac hypertrophy, and cardiac dysfunction. qPCR amplification of near-full-length (∼16kb) mtDNA revealed >50% loss of full-length product, whereas amounts of a qPCR product of a nuclear gene (13kb region of beta globin) were unaffected. Quantitative rtPCR analyses revealed 60–70% loss of mRNA for proteins encoded by mtDNA with no change in mRNA abundance for nuclear-encoded respiratory subunits. These changes coincided with proportionate reductions in complex I and IV activities and decreased respiration of isolated cardiac mitochondria. We conclude that chronic iron overload leads to cumulative iron-mediated damage to mtDNA and impaired synthesis of mitochondrial respiratory chain subunits. The resulting respiratory dysfunction may explain the slow development of cardiomyopathy in chronic iron overload and similar accumulation of damage to mtDNA may also explain the mitochondrial dysfunction observed in slowly progressing diseases such as neurodegenerative disorders.
Elsevier