13 research outputs found

    Mitochondrial ultrastructure and markers of dynamics in hepatocytes from aged, calorie restricted mice fed with different dietary fats

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    PMCID: PMC4104696In this paper we analyzed changes in hepatocyte mitochondrial mass and ultrastructure as well as in mitochondrial markers of fission/fusion and biogenesis in mice subjected to 40% calorie restriction (CR) for 18. months versus ad libitum-fed controls. Animals subjected to CR were separated into three groups with different dietary fats: soybean oil (also in controls), fish oil and lard. Therefore, the effect of the dietary fat under CR was studied as well. Our results show that CR induced changes in hepatocyte and mitochondrial size, in the volume fraction occupied by mitochondria, and in the number of mitochondria per hepatocyte. Also, mean number of mitochondrial cristae and lengths were significantly higher in all CR groups compared with controls. Finally, CR had no remarkable effects on the expression levels of fission and fusion protein markers. However, considerable differences in many of these parameters were found when comparing the CR groups, supporting the idea that dietary fat plays a relevant role in the modulation of CR effects in aged mice.Supported by NIH grant 1R01AG028125-01A1 (to JJR, PN and JMV), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad and European FEDERBFU2011-23578 (to JMV), Junta de Andalucía Proyectos de Excelencia grant P09-CVI-4887 (to JMV), Junta de Andalucía Proyectos Internacionales (to JMV), and BIO-276 (Junta de Andalucía and the University of Córdoba, to JMV and EGC). JALD and LFdR were funded by predoctoral fellowships of the Spanish Ministerio de Educación and by BIO-276. HK was funded by a predoctoral fellowship of the Agencia Española de Cooperación Internacional al Desarrollo and by BIO-276.Peer Reviewe

    The influence of dietary fat source on liver and skeletal muscle mitochondrial modifications and lifespan changes in calorie-restricted mice

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    The Membrane Theory of Aging proposes that lifespan is inversely related to the level of unsaturation in membrane phospholipids. Calorie restriction (CR) without malnutrition extends lifespan in many model organisms, which may be related to alterations in membrane phospholipids fatty acids. During the last few years our research focused on studying how altering the predominant fat source affects the outcome of CR in mice. We have established four dietary groups: one control group fed 95 % of a pre-determined ad libitum intake (in order to prevent obesity), and three CR groups fed 40 % less than ad libitum intake. Lipid source for the control and one of the CR groups was soybean oil (high in n-6 PUFA) whereas the two remaining CR groups were fed diets containing fish oil (high in n-3 PUFA), or lard (high in saturated and monounsaturated fatty acids). Dietary intervention periods ranged from 1 to 18 months. We performed a longitudinal lifespan study and a cross-sectional study set up to evaluate several mitochondrial parameters which included fatty acid composition, H+ leak, activities of electron transport chain enzymes, ROS generation, lipid peroxidation, mitochondrial ultrastructure, and mitochondrial apoptotic signaling in liver and skeletal muscle. These approaches applied to different cohorts of mice have independently indicated that lard as a fat source often maximizes the effects of 40 % CR on mice. These effects could be due to significant increases of monounsaturated fatty acids levels, in accordance with the Membrane Theory of Aging.Supported by NIH grant 1R01AG028125 (to JJR, PN and JMV), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad BFU2011-23578 (to JMV), Junta de Andalucía Proyectos de Excelencia grant P09-CVI-4887 (to JMV), Junta de Andalucía Proyectos Internacionales grant (to JMV), and BIO-276 (Junta de Andalucía and the University of Córdoba, to JMV). RdC is funded by the Intramural Research program of the NIA/NIH. JALD, JA, LFdR and EGC were funded by a predoctoral fellowship of the Spanish Ministerio de Educación and BIO-276. HK was funded by a predoctoral fellowship of the Agencia Española de Cooperación Internacional al Desarrollo and BIO-276. MCR and MdR were supported by BIO-276.Peer Reviewe

    Differential regulation of hepatic apoptotic pathways by dietary olive and sunflower oils in the aging rat

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    11 páginas, 6 figuras.In this work we have studied how dietary fat affects aging-related changes in a number of factors that regulate rat hepatic apoptosis. Animals were fed lifelong with two experimental diets containing either virgin olive oil or sunflower oil as dietary fat. Caspases of the intrinsic and extrinsic pathways of apoptosis, Bcl-2 and Bax polypeptide levels, and plasma membrane neutral sphingomyelinase activity were determined at 6, 12, and 24 months of age. Caspase-8/10 activity (a marker of the extrinsic pathway) was not affected by either aging or dietary fat, but activities of both caspase-9 (a marker of the intrinsic pathway) and caspase-3 (an executioner caspase) were significantly depressed in liver from animals fed on a sunflower oil-based diet. These decreases were not observed in animals fed with a diet based on virgin olive oil, which also resulted in significantly lower Bcl-2/Bax ratios. On the other hand, in comparison with sunflower, dietary olive oil decreased oxidative stress in liver from aged rats, resulting in lower levels of membrane hydroperoxides and higher coenzyme Q levels in plasma membrane. Plasma membrane Mg2+-dependent neutral sphingomyelinase was strongly activated in aged rats fed on the sunflower oil diet, but no aging-related increase was observed in animals fed on the olive oil diet. Our results support that dietary oil can alter significantly the susceptibility of hepatocytes to different apoptotic stimuli by altering both pro- and anti-apoptotic mediators, which reinforces the importance of the diet in aging studies. Because virgin olive oil may increase susceptibility of hepatocytes to apoptosis induced through the intrinsic pathway under conditions of decreased oxidative stress, our results may have important implications to understand the potential beneficial effects of that edible oil against liver carcinogenesis during aging.Supported by Grants Nos. 1FD97-0457-C02-02, BFU2005-00137/BMC (Spanish Ministerio de Educación y Ciencia), and CVI-276 and CVI-177 (Junta de Andalucía). R.I.B. acknowledges financial support by Instituto Danone. C.G.D. was supported by CVI-276.Peer reviewe

    Enhanced anti-oxidant protection of liver membranes in long-lived rats fed on a coenzyme Q10-supplemented diet

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    13 páginas, 6 figuras.Coenzyme Q10 supplementation increases life-span of rats fed on a diet enriched with polyunsaturated fatty acids (Quiles, J.L., Ochoa, J.J., Huertas, J.R., Mataix, J., 2004b. Coenzyme Q supplementation protects from age-related DNA double-strand breaks and increased lifespan in rats fed on a PUFA-rich diet. Exp. Gerontol. 39, 189–194). Our study was set as a first attempt to establish a mechanistic link between life span extension and CoQ10 supplementation. When rats were fed on a PUFAn−6 plus CoQ10 diet, levels of CoQ10 were increased in plasma membrane at every time point compared to control rats fed on a PUFAn-6-alone diet. Ratios of CoQ9 to CoQ10 were significantly lower at every time point in both liver plasma membranes and homogenates of CoQ10-supplemented animals. CoQ10 supplementation did not affect cytosolic NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase 1 (NQO1), which increased significantly with aging, but plasma membrane-bound NQO1 decreased significantly in the CoQ10-supplemented group at 12 months, when maximal incorporation of exogenous CoQ10 was observed. Neither aging nor the diet affected NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase levels. Glutathione-dependent anti-oxidant activities such as cytosolic glutathione-S-transferase (GST) and microsomal Se-independent glutathione peroxidase decreased with aging and supplementation with CoQ10 attenuated this decay. 2,2′ Azobis amidinopropane (AAPH)-induced oxidation of membranes was significantly higher in aged rats, and supplementation with CoQ10 also inhibited this increase. Consistent with higher CoQ10 levels and enhanced anti-oxidant protection, plasma membrane Mg2+-dependent neutral sphingomyelinase was inhibited by dietary CoQ10 in aged rats. Our results support the involvement of thiol-dependent mechanisms in the potentiation of the anti-oxidant capacity of membranes in CoQ10-supplemented rats, further supporting the potentially beneficial anti-oxidative role of dietary CoQ10 during aging. The possibility that a decreased CoQ9/CoQ10 ratio in animals fed on the PUFAn−6-rich plus CoQ10 diet could also influence longevity is also discussed.Supported by Grants No. 1FD97-0457-C02-02 and BMC2002-01078 (Spanish Ministerio de Educación y Cultura and Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología), and CVI-276 (Junta de Andalucía). R.I.B. acknowledges financial support by Instituto Danone. C.G.D. was supported by CVI-276.Peer reviewe

    Dietary fat modulates calorie restriction-induced changes of apoptotic markers in mouse skeletal muscle

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    Resumen del póster presentado al XIV Congresos de la Sociedad Española de Biología Celular, celebrado en Málaga del 12 al 15 de diciembre de 2011.Ageing is a progressive and irreversible process leading to a general loss of function. In skeletal muscle, a postmitotic tissue exhibiting a low regenerative rate, several factors which include increased levels of apoptosis, result in a decline in mass and function, known as sarcopenia. Calorie restriction without malnutrition (CR) has been proved to prevent or delay several ageassociated pathophysiological changes in rodents. Although the mechanisms underlying this effect have to be fully determined, both a decrease in oxidative damage and a change in membranes composition appear to be involved. In our work we studied the synergic effect of six-month 40% calorie restriction and variations in fat composition of diets. We established three groups of C57BL/6 mice subjected to CR with diets containing lard, soybean oil or fish oil as their primary fat source respectively. To determine whether any of the diets exhibits a preventive role on skeletal muscle apoptosis, some markers of apoptotic cell death were studied, namely caspases 3, 8 and 9, Bax levels, and plasma membrane-bound neutral sphingomyelinase activity. Additionally, levels of sarcolemmal coenzyme Q9 and Q10 and lipid hydroperoxides were measured for a better characterization of the cellular redox status. Decreased levels of sphingomyelinase activity, lipid hydroperoxides and Bax were observed as a response to calorie restriction. Additionally, a fish oil-based diet resulted in general and significant changes such as additional decreases in caspase 8 and 9 activities, or increases in sarcolemmal coenzyme Q9 and Q10 content. CR regulated parameters mentioned above were positively influenced by this diet with the only exception of caspase 3 activity, for which no significant changes were observed. Further studies involving long-term calorie restriction and diet variations in old mice will soon help to better establish the extent to which apoptotic processes are regulated by membrane composition or membrane-linked metabolic activity.Peer reviewe

    Dietary fat composition influences glomerular and proximal convoluted tubule cell structure and autophagic processes in kidneys from calorie-restricted mice

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    Calorie restriction (CR) has been repeatedly shown to prevent cancer, diabetes, hypertension, and other age-related diseases in a wide range of animals, including non-human primates and humans. In rodents, CR also increases lifespan and is a powerful tool for studying the aging process. Recently, it has been reported in mice that dietary fat plays an important role in determining lifespan extension with 40% CR. In these conditions, animals fed lard as dietary fat showed an increased longevity compared with mice fed soybean or fish oils. In this paper, we study the effect of these dietary fats on structural and physiological parameters of kidney from mice maintained on 40% CR for 6 and 18 months. Analyses were performed using quantitative electron microcopy techniques and protein expression in Western blots. CR mitigated most of the analyzed age-related parameters in kidney, such as glomerular basement membrane thickness, mitochondrial mass in convoluted proximal tubules and autophagic markers in renal homogenates. The lard group showed improved preservation of several renal structures with aging when compared to the other CR diet groups. These results indicate that dietary fat modulates renal structure and function in CR mice and plays an essential role in the determination of health span in rodents.Supported by NIH grant 1R01AG028125 (to JJR, PN, and JMV), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad BFU2011‐23578 (to JMV) and DEP2012‐39985 (to GL‐L), Junta de Andalucía Proyectos de Excelencia grant P09‐CVI‐4887 (to JMV), Junta de Andalucía Proyectos Internacionales (to JMV), BIO‐276 (Junta de Andalucía and the University of Córdoba, to JMV) and Fondo de Investigaciones Sanitarias FIS PI14‐01962 (to PN). RdC is supported by the Intramural Research Program of the National Institute on Aging of the National Institutes of Health. MC‐R is funded by predoctoral fellowship of the Spanish Ministerio de Educación and by BIO‐276.Peer Reviewe

    Dietary fat modifies mitochondrial and plasma membrane apoptotic signaling in skeletal muscle of calorierestricted mice

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    Calorie restriction decreases skeletal muscle apoptosis, and this phenomenon has been mechanistically linked to its protective action against sarcopenia of aging. Alterations in lipid composition of membranes have been related with the beneficial effects of calorie restriction. However, no study has been designed to date to elucidate if different dietary fat sources with calorie restriction modify apoptotic signaling in skeletal muscle. We show that a 6-month calorie restriction decreased the activity of the plasma membrane neutral sphingomyelinase, although caspase-8/10 activity was not altered, in young adult mice. Lipid hydroperoxides, Bax levels, and cytochrome c and AIF release/accumulation into the cytosol were also decreased, although caspase-9 activity was unchanged. No alterations in caspase-3 and apoptotic index (DNA fragmentation) were observed, but calorie restriction improved structural features of gastrocnemius fibers by increasing cross-sectional area and decreasing circularity of fibers in cross sections. Changing dietary fat with calorie restriction produced substantial alterations of apoptotic signaling. Fish oil augmented the protective effect of calorie restriction decreasing plasma membrane neutral sphingomyelinase, Bax levels, caspase-8/10, and -9 activities, while increasing levels of the antioxidant coenzyme Q at the plasma membrane, and potentiating the increase of crosssectional area and the decrease of fiber circularity in cross sections. Many of these changes were not found when we used lard. Our data support that dietary fish oil with calorie restriction produces a cellular anti-apoptotic environment in skeletal muscle with a downregulation of components involved in the initial stages of apoptosis engagement, both at the plasma membrane and the mitochondria.This work was supported by NIH grant 1R01AG028125-01A1 (to JJR, PN and JMV), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad BFU2011-23578 (to JMV), Junta de Andalucía Proyectos de Excelencia grant P09-CVI-4887 (to JMV), Junta de Andalucía Proyectos Internacionales grant (to JMV), and BIO-276 (Junta de Andalucía and the University of Córdoba, to JMV). JALD was funded by a predoctoral fellowship of the Spanish Ministerio de Educación. HK was funded by a predoctoral fellowship of the Agencia Española de Cooperación Internacional al Desarrollo.Peer Reviewe

    Kaempferol increases levels of coenzyme Q in kidney cells and serves as a biosynthetic ring precursor.

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    Coenzyme Q (Q) is a lipid-soluble antioxidant essential in cellular physiology. Patients with Q deficiencies, with few exceptions, seldom respond to treatment. Current therapies rely on dietary supplementation with Q10, but due to its highly lipophilic nature, Q10 is difficult to absorb by tissues and cells. Plant polyphenols, present in the human diet, are redox active and modulate numerous cellular pathways. In the present study, we tested whether treatment with polyphenols affected the content or biosynthesis of Q. Mouse kidney proximal tubule epithelial (Tkpts) cells and human embryonic kidney cells 293 (HEK 293) were treated with several types of polyphenols, and kaempferol produced the largest increase in Q levels. Experiments with stable isotope 13C-labeled kaempferol demonstrated a previously unrecognized role of kaempferol as an aromatic ring precursor in Q biosynthesis. Investigations of the structure-function relationship of related flavonols showed the importance of two hydroxyl groups, located at C3 of the C ring and C4' of the B ring, both present in kaempferol, as important determinants of kaempferol as a Q biosynthetic precursor. Concurrently, through a mechanism not related to the enhancement of Q biosynthesis, kaempferol also augmented mitochondrial localization of Sirt3. The role of kaempferol as a precursor that increases Q levels, combined with its ability to upregulate Sirt3, identify kaempferol as a potential candidate in the design of interventions aimed on increasing endogenous Q biosynthesis, particularly in kidney

    Mitochondrial ultrastructure and markers of dynamics in hepatocytes from aged, calorie restricted mice fed with different dietary fats

    No full text
    In this paper we analyzed changes in hepatocyte mitochondrial mass and ultrastructure as well as in mitochondrial markers of fission/fusion and biogenesis in mice subjected to 40% calorie restriction (CR) for 18 months versus ad libitum-fed controls. Animals subjected to CR were separated into three groups with different dietary fats: soybean oil (also in controls), fish oil and lard. Therefore, the effect of the dietary fat under CR was studied as well. Our results show that CR induced changes in hepatocyte and mitochondrial size, in the volume fraction occupied by mitochondria, and in the number of mitochondria per hepatocyte. Also, mean number of mitochondrial cristae and lengths were significantly higher in all CR groups compared with controls. Finally, CR had no remarkable effects on the expression levels of fission and fusion protein markers. However, considerable differences in many of these parameters were found when comparing the CR groups, supporting the idea that dietary fat plays a relevant role in the modulation of CR effects in aged mice
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