Mitochondrial respiratory defect causes dysfunctional lactate turnover via AMP-activated protein kinase activation in human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived hepatocytes

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Abstract

A defective mitochondrial respiratory chain complex (DMRC) causes various metabolic disorders in humans. However, the pathophysiology ofDMRCin the liver remains unclear. To understand DMRC pathophysiology in vitro, DMRC-induced pluripotent stem cells were generated from dermal fibroblasts of a DMRC patient who had a homoplasmic mutation (m.3398T→C) in the mitochondrion-encodedNADHdehydrogenase 1 (MTND1) gene and that differentiated into hepatocytes (DMRC hepatocytes) in vitro. DMRC hepatocytes showed abnormalities in mitochondrial characteristics, the NAD+/NADH ratio, the glycogen storage level, the lactate turnover rate, and AMPK activity. Intriguingly, low glycogen storage and transcription of lactate turnover-related genes in DMRC hepatocytes were recovered by inhibition of AMPK activity. Thus, AMPK activation led to metabolic changes in terms of glycogen storage and lactate turnover in DMRC hepatocytes. These data demonstrate for the first time that energy depletion may lead to lactic acidosis in the DMRC patient by reduction of lactate uptake via AMPK in liver.

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Im, I., Jang, M. J., Park, S. J., Lee, S. H., Choi, J. H., Yoo, H. W., … Han, Y. M. (2015). Mitochondrial respiratory defect causes dysfunctional lactate turnover via AMP-activated protein kinase activation in human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived hepatocytes. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 290(49), 29493–29505. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M115.670364

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