Physiological Reports (Sep 2020)

Decreased AMP‐activated protein kinase (AMPK) function and protective effect of metformin in neonatal rat pups exposed to hyperoxia lung injury

  • Abha Yadav,
  • Ujala Rana,
  • Teresa Michalkiewicz,
  • Ru‐Jeng Teng,
  • Girija G. Konduri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.14814/phy2.14587
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 18
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract We investigated the hypothesis that exposure of lungs at the saccular stage of development to hyperoxia leads to persistent growth arrest and dysfunction of 5’AMP‐activated protein kinase (AMPK), a key energy sensor in the cell. We exposed neonatal rat pups from postnatal day 1‐ day 10 (P1–P10) to ≥90% oxygen or control normoxia. Pups were euthanized at P4 or P10 or recovered in normoxia until euthanasia at P21. Half of the pups in each group received AMPK activator, metformin, or saline intraperitoneally from P1 to P10. Lung histology, morphometric analysis, immunofluorescence, and immunoblots were done for changes in lung structure at P10 and P21 and AMPK function at P4, P10, and P21. Phosphorylation of AMPK (p‐AMPK) was decreased in lungs at P10 and P21 in hyperoxia‐exposed pups. Metformin increased the levels of p‐AMPK and PGC‐1α, a downstream AMPK target which regulates mitochondrial biogenesis, at P4, P10, and P21 in hyperoxia pups. Lung ATP levels decreased during hyperoxia and were increased by metformin at P10 and P21. Radial alveolar count and alveolar septal tips were decreased and mean linear intercept increased in hyperoxia‐exposed pups at P10 and the changes persisted at P21; these were improved by metformin. Lung capillary number was decreased in hyperoxia‐exposed pups at P10 and P21 and was restored by metformin. Hyperoxia leads to impaired AMPK function, energy balance and alveolar simplification. The AMPK activator, metformin improves AMPK function and alveolar and vascular growth in this rat pup model of hyperoxia‐induced lung injury.

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