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Mitochondria antioxidant protection against cardiovascular dysfunction programmed by early‐onset gestational hypoxia
Author(s) -
Spiroski AnaMishel,
Niu Youguo,
Nicholas Lisa M.,
AustinWilliams Shani,
Camm Emily J.,
Sutherland Megan R.,
Ashmore Thomas J.,
Skeffington Katie. L.,
Logan Angela,
Ozanne Susan E.,
Murphy Michael P.,
Giussani Dino A.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fj.202002705r
Subject(s) - offspring , oxidative stress , hypoxia (environmental) , fetus , medicine , mitochondrion , pregnancy , endocrinology , physiology , biology , chemistry , biochemistry , genetics , organic chemistry , oxygen
Abstract Mitochondria‐derived oxidative stress during fetal development increases cardiovascular risk in adult offspring of pregnancies complicated by chronic fetal hypoxia. We investigated the efficacy of the mitochondria‐targeted antioxidant MitoQ in preventing cardiovascular dysfunction in adult rat offspring exposed to gestational hypoxia, integrating functional experiments in vivo, with those at the isolated organ and molecular levels. Rats were randomized to normoxic or hypoxic (13%‐14% O 2 ) pregnancy ± MitoQ (500 μM day −1 ) in the maternal drinking water. At 4 months of age, one cohort of male offspring was chronically instrumented with vascular catheters and flow probes to test in vivo cardiovascular function. In a second cohort, the heart was isolated and mounted onto a Langendorff preparation. To establish mechanisms linking gestational hypoxia with cardiovascular dysfunction and protection by MitoQ, we quantified the expression of antioxidant system, β‐adrenergic signaling, and calcium handling genes in the fetus and adult, in frozen tissues from a third cohort. Maternal MitoQ in hypoxic pregnancy protected offspring against increased α 1 ‐adrenergic reactivity of the cardiovascular system, enhanced reactive hyperemia in peripheral vascular beds, and sympathetic dominance, hypercontractility and diastolic dysfunction in the heart. Inhibition of Nfe2l2 ‐mediated oxidative stress in the fetal heart and preservation of calcium regulatory responses in the hearts of fetal and adult offspring link molecular mechanisms to the protective actions of MitoQ treatment of hypoxic pregnancy. Therefore, these data show the efficacy of MitoQ in buffering mitochondrial stress through NADPH‐induced oxidative damage and the prevention of programmed cardiovascular disease in adult offspring of hypoxic pregnancy.