Turning down the heat: How heat stress affects muscle ... heat stress affects muscle growth and...

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Turning down the heat: How heat stress affects muscle growth and limits pork production

Joshua Selsby, Ph.D.jselsby@iastate.eduIowa State University

Swine Day

• Heat stress is the largest impediment to efficient animal agriculture (even in developed countries)• Cost: (lost productivity, mortality, product quality, health care etc.)

• American Agriculture: > $3 billion/year• Global Agriculture: > $100 billion/year

• Heat abatement is the primary strategy to mitigate heat stress • Most developing countries lack the resources to afford this

• Human health concern • Threatens global food security

Heat Stress: Economics and Food Security

Therapeutic Effects of Hyperthermia

Pathological heat stress is fundamentally different

Heat StressHeat

StressLess

MuscleLess

Muscle

Intensity? Duration?Mechanism?

Pathological heat stress is fundamentally different

Heat StressHeat

StressLess

MuscleLess

MuscleSynthesis

Degradation

Heat StressHeat

StressLess

MuscleLess

Muscle

AA RepartitioningDecreased SynthesisIncreased Degradation

Pathological heat stress is fundamentally different

CalpainsProteasomeOxidative StressAutophagyInflammatory Signaling ER Stress (UPR) ApoptosisMitochondrial dysfunction

Pig Production

Pig Production During HS

Autophagy allows removal of damaged organelles.

2-6 h of HS increases autophagy

Autophagy allows removal of damaged organelles.

2-6 h of HS increases autophagy

2-6 h of HS increases clearance of damage mitochondria through autophagy

2-6 hours of Heat StressAfter an initial injury muscle cells respond to heat stress by removing damaged mitochondria or damaged parts of mitochondria via autophagy/mitophagy.

2 4 6

Damaged mitochondria

Autophagy/Mitophagy

Restored/protected mitochondrial pool

12-24 hours of Heat StressContinued HS causes increased oxidative stress

TN 12 hr HS0.00

0.05

0.10

0.15

0.20

*#

MD

A co

ncen

trat

ion

( M

)

TN 24 hr HS0

1

2

3

4

*

Fold

Cha

nge

12 hrs HS 24 hrs HS

Autophagy allows removal of damaged organelles.

12 h of HS results:Failure to sustain activationStalling of degradation

Autophagy allows removal of damaged organelles.

24 h of HS results:Impaired activationBlunted degradationDecreased mitophagy

24 hours of Heat Stress

Nuclei Lysosomes Autophagosomes

CYTC COX IV PHB1 SDHA VDAC PDH0

1

2

4

6

TNHSPFTN

* * *

*

*#

##

Rel

ativ

e pr

otei

n ex

pres

sion

Cyto C

Cox IV

VDACPDHSDHA

CIII UQCRC2

CIV MTCO1

CII SDHB

0

1

2

3 TN24 h HS* *

* ** *

Rela

tive

Prot

ein

Abun

danc

e

Continued HS causes an accumulation of mitochondriaNote: these are likely damaged, pro-oxidant mitochodnria

12-24 hours of Heat Stress

Chronology of Heat StressAfter an initial injury muscle cells respond to heat stress by removing damaged mitochondria or damaged parts of mitochondria via autophagy/mitophagy.

2 6 12 24

Effective response Collapse of response with continued heat stress

Over time this process appears to fail allowing the accumulation of oxidativelymodified proteins and damaged mitochondria.

/AO

Proposed Mechanism

CHOLipidAA

ATP

X

ROS

Apoptosis

Ca2+

Cytosolic ROS

Autophagy

X?

?

?

?

• Complete a chronology of heat stress-mediated changes in skeletal muscle.

• Determine the extent to which cytosolic sources of free radical production contribute to impaired efficiency.

• Determine the extent to which:Mito-protection…Stimulation of autophagy…

…attenuate losses in efficiency

Future Research Objectives

Acknowledgements

Contributions by

• Shanthi Ganesan• Alex Brownstein

• Baumgard Lab• Gabler Lab• Rhoads Lab

Supported by

• USDA/NIFA Grant No. 2011-67003-30007

• USDA/NIFA Grant No. 2014-67015-21627

• Wise Burroughs Endowment

Questions