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Succinate accumulation drives ischaemia-reperfusion injury during organ transplantation.

Jack L MartinAna S H CostaAnja V GruszczykTimothy E BeachFay M AllenHiran A PragElizabeth C HinchyKrishnaa T A MahbubaniMazin HamedLaura TronciEfterpi NikitopoulouAndrew M JamesThomas KriegAlan J RobinsonMargaret M HuangStuart T CaldwellAngela LoganLaura PalaRichard C HartleyChristian FrezzaKourosh Saeb ParsyMichael P Murphy
Published in: Nature metabolism (2021)
During heart transplantation, storage in cold preservation solution is thought to protect the organ by slowing metabolism; by providing osmotic support; and by minimising ischaemia-reperfusion (IR) injury upon transplantation into the recipient1,2. Despite its widespread use our understanding of the metabolic changes prevented by cold storage and how warm ischaemia leads to damage is surprisingly poor. Here, we compare the metabolic changes during warm ischaemia (WI) and cold ischaemia (CI) in hearts from mouse, pig, and human. We identify common metabolic alterations during WI and those affected by CI, thereby elucidating mechanisms underlying the benefits of CI, and how WI causes damage. Succinate accumulation is a major feature within ischaemic hearts across species, and CI slows succinate generation, thereby reducing tissue damage upon reperfusion caused by the production of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS)3,4. Importantly, the inevitable periods of WI during organ procurement lead to the accumulation of damaging levels of succinate during transplantation, despite cooling organs as rapidly as possible. This damage is ameliorated by metabolic inhibitors that prevent succinate accumulation and oxidation. Our findings suggest how WI and CI contribute to transplant outcome and indicate new therapies for improving the quality of transplanted organs.
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