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Cyclic stretch increases mitochondrial biogenesis in a cardiac cell line.

Unlike stable and immobile cell line conditions, animal hearts contract and relax to pump blood throughout the body. Mitochondria play an essential role by producing biological energy molecules to maintain heart function. In this study, we assessed the effect of heart mimetic cyclic stretch on mitochondria in a cardiac cell line. To mimic the geometric and biomechanical conditions surrounding cells in vivo, cyclic stretching was performed on HL-1 murine cardiomyocytes seeded onto an elastic micropatterned substrate (10% elongation, 0.5 Hz, 4 h/day). Cell viability, semi-quantitative Q-PCR, and western blot analyses were performed in non-stimulated control and cyclic stretch stimulated HL-1 cell lines. Cyclic stretch significantly increased the expression of mitochondria biogenesis-related genes (TUFM, TFAM, ERRα, and PGC1-α) and mitochondria oxidative phosphorylation-related genes (PHB1 and CYTB). Western blot analysis confirmed that cyclic stretch increased protein levels of mitochondria biogenesis-related proteins (TFAM, and ERRα) and oxidative phosphorylation-related proteins (NDUFS1, UQCRC, and PHB1). Consequently, cyclic stretch increased mitochondrial mass and ATP production in treated cells. Our results suggest that cyclic stretch transcriptionally enhanced mitochondria biogenesis and oxidative phosphorylation without detrimental effects in a cultured cardiac cell line.

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