Myoglobin Interaction with Lactate Rapidly Releases Oxygen: Studies on Binding Thermodynamics, Spectroscopy, and Oxygen Kinetics

  • Kiran Kumar Adepu
  • , Dipendra Bhandari
  • , Andriy Anishkin
  • , Sean H. Adams
  • , Sree V. Chintapalli

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

Myoglobin (Mb)-mediated oxygen (O2) delivery and dissolved O2 in the cytosol are two major sources that support oxidative phosphorylation. During intense exercise, lactate (LAC) production is elevated in skeletal muscles as a consequence of insufficient intracellular O2 supply. The latter results in diminished mitochondrial oxidative metabolism and an increased reliance on nonoxidative pathways to generate ATP. Whether or not metabolites from these pathways impact Mb-O2 associations remains to be established. In the present study, we employed isothermal titration calorimetry, O2 kinetic studies, and UV-Vis spectroscopy to evaluate the LAC affinity toward Mb (oxy-and deoxy-Mb) and the effect of LAC on O2 release from oxy-Mb in varying pH conditions (pH 6.0–7.0). Our results show that LAC avidly binds to both oxy-and deoxy-Mb (only at acidic pH for the latter). Similarly, in the presence of LAC, increased release of O2 from oxy-Mb was detected. This suggests that with LAC binding to Mb, the structural conformation of the protein (near the heme center) might be altered, which concomitantly triggers the release of O2. Taken together, these novel findings support a mechanism where LAC acts as a regulator of O2 management in Mb-rich tissues and/or influences the putative signaling roles for oxy-and deoxy-Mb, especially under conditions of LAC accumulation and lactic acidosis.

Original languageEnglish
Article number4747
JournalInternational Journal of Molecular Sciences
Volume23
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - May 1 2022
Externally publishedYes

Funding

Acknowledgments: The authors are grateful for the support of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Department of Pediatrics and the Arkansas Children’s Nutrition Center. The authors thank James D. Sikes for his support in building the vacuum manifold setup for our spectral and oxytherm+ experiments, and Keith D. Williams, Department of Biostatistics, for his kind input on statistical data analysis. Funding: This work was supported in part through USDA-ARS project 6026-51000-012-06S, Sturgis Foundation Pilot Grant G1-54750-01, and ACRI-ABI Investigator Initiated Grant Award GR037175-4450S ABI.

Keywords

  • binding
  • lactate
  • lactic acidosis
  • myoglobin
  • oxygen release

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