Thiazolidinediones are acute, specific inhibitors of the mitochondrial pyruvate carrier.

Authors

Divakaruni, Ajit S; Wiley, Sandra E; Rogers, George W; Andreyev, Alexander Y; Petrosyan, Susanna; Loviscach, Mattias; Wall, Estelle A; Yadava, Nagendra; Heuck, Alejandro P; Ferrick, David A; Henry, Robert R; McDonald, William G; Colca, Jerry R; Simon, Melvin I; Ciaraldi, Theodore P; Murphy, Anne N

Publication Year 2013
Journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Chapter
Pages 5422-5427
Volume 110
Issue 14
Issn
Isbn
PMID 23513224.0
PMCID PMC3619368
DOI 10.1073/pnas.1303360110
URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1303360110

Facilitated pyruvate transport across the mitochondrial inner membrane is a critical step in carbohydrate, amino acid, and lipid metabolism. We report that clinically relevant concentrations of thiazolidinediones (TZDs), a widely used class of insulin sensitizers, acutely and specifically inhibit mitochondrial pyruvate carrier (MPC) activity in a variety of cell types. Respiratory inhibition was overcome with methyl pyruvate, localizing the effect to facilitated pyruvate transport, and knockdown of either paralog, MPC1 or MPC2, decreased the EC50 for respiratory inhibition by TZDs. Acute MPC inhibition significantly enhanced glucose uptake in human skeletal muscle myocytes after 2 h. These data (i) report that clinically used TZDs inhibit the MPC, (ii) validate that MPC1 and MPC2 are obligatory components of facilitated pyruvate transport in mammalian cells, (iii) indicate that the acute effect of TZDs may be related to insulin sensitization, and (iv) establish mitochondrial pyruvate uptake as a potential therapeutic target for diseases rooted in metabolic dysfunction.