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Reperfusion-Induced Translocation of δPKC to Cardiac Mitochondria Prevents Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Reactivation

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TLDR
Translocation of the redox-sensitive &dgr;-isoform of protein kinase C (PKC) to the mitochondria occurred during reperfusion and likely results in activation of PDK2 and phosphorylation-dependent inhibition of PDH.
Abstract
Cardiac ischemia and reperfusion are associated with loss in the activity of the mitochondrial enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH). Pharmacological stimulation of PDH activity improves recovery in contractile function during reperfusion. Signaling mechanisms that control inhibition and reactivation of PDH during reperfusion were therefore investigated. Using an isolated rat heart model, we observed ischemia-induced PDH inhibition with only partial recovery evident on reperfusion. Translocation of the redox-sensitive delta-isoform of protein kinase C (PKC) to the mitochondria occurred during reperfusion. Inhibition of this process resulted in full recovery of PDH activity. Infusion of the deltaPKC activator H2O2 during normoxic perfusion, to mimic one aspect of cardiac reperfusion, resulted in loss in PDH activity that was largely attributable to translocation of deltaPKC to the mitochondria. Evidence indicates that reperfusion-induced translocation of deltaPKC is associated with phosphorylation of the alphaE1 subunit of PDH. A potential mechanism is provided by in vitro data demonstrating that deltaPKC specifically interacts with and phosphorylates pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase (PDK)2. Importantly, this results in activation of PDK2, an enzyme capable of phosphorylating and inhibiting PDH. Thus, translocation of deltaPKC to the mitochondria during reperfusion likely results in activation of PDK2 and phosphorylation-dependent inhibition of PDH.

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Cardiac Metabolism and its Interactions With Contraction, Growth, and Survival of Cardiomyocytes

TL;DR: An overview of the cardiac metabolic network is provided and alterations observed in cardiac pathologies as well as strategies used as metabolic therapies in heart failure are highlighted.
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Protein kinase C, an elusive therapeutic target?

TL;DR: This Review provides a short account of some of the efforts, challenges and opportunities in developing PKC modulators to address unmet clinical needs.
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Sex Differences in the Phosphorylation of Mitochondrial Proteins Result in Reduced Production of Reactive Oxygen Species and Cardioprotection in Females

TL;DR: The data suggest that posttranslational modifications can modify ROS handling and play an important role in female cardioprotection and found that protein kinase C–dependent phosphorylation of purified &agr;KGDH reduced ROS generation.
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Mechanisms underlying regulation of the expression and activities of the mammalian pyruvate dehydrogenase kinases

TL;DR: Recent advances relating to the acute and long-term modes of regulation of the PDKs are described, with particular emphasis on the regulatory roles of nuclear receptors, PPAR γ coactivator α (PGC-1α) and insulin, and the impact of changes in PDK activity and expression in glucose and lipid homeostasis.
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Mitochondrial modulation: reversible phosphorylation takes center stage?

TL;DR: The steadily increasing number of reported mitochondrial kinases, phosphatases and phosphoproteins suggests that phosphorylation is likely to emerge as a common theme in the regulation of mitochondrial processes.
References
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Wulf Dröge
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Molecular and Cellular Mechanisms of Myocardial Stunning

TL;DR: An important implication of the phenomenon of myocardial stunning is that so-called chronic hibernation may in fact be the result of repetitive episodes of stunning, which have a cumulative effect and cause protracted postischemic dysfunction.

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TL;DR: This book contains 72 chapters that discuss Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Radionuclide Methods to Assess Cardiac Function, Perfusion Viability and Necrosis, NMR Imaging of the Cardiovascular System, Quantitative Angiographic Techniques, RNA Transcription in Heart Muscle, and Reentry Rhythms.
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Regulation of protein function by S-glutathiolation in response to oxidative and nitrosative stress.

TL;DR: A review of recent work supporting a role for S-glutathiolation in stress signalling pathways and in the adaptive cellular response to oxidative and nitrosative stress and the molecular mechanisms of protein regulation by oxidative andNitrosative thiol-group modifications are outlined.
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TL;DR: The goal of this report is to review the current knowledge of ROS-regulated signal transduction and propose future directions.
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