IFN‐γ and androgens disrupt mitochondrial function in murine myocytes
The effect of cytokines on non‐traditional immunological targets under conditions of chronic inflammation is an ongoing subject of study. Fatigue is a symptom often associated with autoimmune diseases. Chronic inflammatory response and activated cell‐mediated immunity are associated with cardiovascu...
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Published in | The Journal of pathology Vol. 260; no. 3; pp. 276 - 288 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Chichester, UK
John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
01.07.2023
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | The effect of cytokines on non‐traditional immunological targets under conditions of chronic inflammation is an ongoing subject of study. Fatigue is a symptom often associated with autoimmune diseases. Chronic inflammatory response and activated cell‐mediated immunity are associated with cardiovascular myopathies which can be driven by muscle weakness and fatigue. Thus, we hypothesize that immune dysfunction‐driven changes in myocyte mitochondria may play a critical role in fatigue‐related pathogenesis. We show that persistent low‐level expression of IFN‐γ in designated IFN‐γ AU‐Rich Element deletion mice (ARE mice) under androgen exposure resulted in mitochondrial and metabolic deficiencies in myocytes from male or castrated ARE mice. Most notably, echocardiography unveiled that low ejection fraction in the left ventricle post‐stress correlated with mitochondrial deficiencies, explaining how heart function decreases under stress. We report that inefficiencies and structural changes in mitochondria, with changes to expression of mitochondrial genes, are linked to male‐biased fatigue and acute cardiomyopathy under stress. Our work highlights how male androgen hormone backgrounds and active autoimmunity reduce mitochondrial function and the ability to cope with stress and how pharmacological blockade of stress signal protects heart function. These studies provide new insight into the diverse actions of IFN‐γ in fatigue, energy metabolism, and autoimmunity. © 2023 The Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland. This article has been contributed to by U.S. Government employees and their work is in the public domain in the USA. |
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Bibliography: | No conflicts of interest were declared. Co‐principal investigators. ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 14 content type line 23 JMF was responsible for the conceptualization of the project, overall data curation, validation, investigation, methodology, writing–original draft, project administration, writing–review, and editing of this work. DAS was responsible for echocardiogram, data curation, visualization, and methodologies. MER was responsible for TEM methodology. EFE was responsible for pathology investigation, visualization, and methodologies. DWM oversaw laboratory branch supervision, metabolic methodology consultation, and analysis. SY was responsible for open field methodology. MES was responsible for independent analysis of electron microscopy. TS was responsible for independent verification of cytokines. EE was responsible for RT-PCR verification methodology. TJM was responsible for RNAseq methodology, data curation, and validation. JCV was responsible for assistance in conceptualization, supervision, investigation, writing–review, and editing of the project. HAY assisted in conceptualization, provided resources, supervision, investigation, writing–original draft, and editing. All authors have approved the submitted version of this manuscript. Co-principal investigators. Author contributions statement |
ISSN: | 0022-3417 1096-9896 1096-9896 |
DOI: | 10.1002/path.6081 |