Abstract:
Diabetes now affects more than 5% of the world's population and heart failure is the most common cause of death amongst diabetic patients. Accumulating evidence supports a view that myocardial mitochondrial structural and functional changes are central to the onset of diabetic heart failure, but the exact nature of these changes at the proteomic level remains unclear. Here we report on proteomic changes in diabetic rat heart mitochondria following 120,days of streptozotocin-diabetes using the recently developed iTRAQ (TM) labeling method, which permits quantification of proteins directly from complex mixtures, bypassing the limitations associated with gel-based methods such as 2-DE. Of 252 unique proteins identified, 144,were represented in at least,three of six individual paired experiments. Relative amounts of 65 proteins differed significantly between the groups, confirming that the cardiac mitochondrial proteome is indeed impacted by diabetes. The most significant changes were increased protein levels of enzymes involved in mitochondrial oxidation of long-chain fatty acids, which was also confirmed by enzyme assays, and decreased levels of multiple enzymes involved in oxidative phospohorylation and catabolism of short chain fatty acids and branched-chain amino acids. We also found significant changes in levels of several enzymes linked to oxidative stress.