Publicación: Reduced mitochondrial respiration in mouse cerebral cortex during chronic hypoxia
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Abstract Respiratory activity and NADH CoQ reductase (complex I) and cytochrome c oxidase (complex IV) activities were measured in free (non-synaptosomal) mitochondria isolated from cerebral cortex of male Balb/c mice exposed to intermittent hypobaric hypoxia (450 Torr; 4300 m) for 21 days and compared to normoxic (sea level) controls. In the hypoxic we found a 47% reduction of oxygen uptake during state 3 (ADP and substrate present), 12% reduction during state 4 (no ADP present) and 20% reduction in the uncoupled respiration rate with pyruvate plus malate as substrates. Respiratory control ratio (RCR) decreased by 24%. No change in the ADP/O ratio was seen. NADH CoQ reductase activity decreased by 30% and cytochrome c oxidase by 17%, suggesting that under conditions of chronic hypoxia, the reductions of mitochondrial respiratory activities are caused, at least in part, by enzymatic alterations of the electron transport chain (complex I and complex IV). The decreased activity of these enzymes could contribute to alterations in neuronal activity by reducing brain energy metabolism during development under conditions of chronic hypoxia. Keywords Hypoxia; Brain mitochondria; NADH CoQ reductase (complex I); Cytochrome c oxidase (complex IV)


