K-Regio MitoFit

From Bioblast



K-Regio MitoFit

mitochondria fit & well


2015-05-01 to 2018-10-31
K-Regio MitoFit

Diagnosis of mitochondrial functions and mitochondrial injuries

Diagnosis of mitochondrial functions and mitochondrial injuries represents a current challenge for biomedical research and development. We address these challenges by introducing and extending the approach of OXPHOS analysis as the state-of-the-art functional test of mitochondrial competence. MitoFit establishes an inter-university Network in Mitochondrial Physiology and Comprehensive Exercise Testing, supporting translational research on mitochondrial competence in close collaboration with the local industry and other networks, e.g. Oncotyrol. Mitochondrial fitness will play an increasing role in therapeutic and preventive medicine, with exercise and caloric balance providing the most effective measures for the reduction of several age-related health risks and degenerative diseases. MitoFit is a gateway and milestone to better diagnose, support and treat patients in our modern, rapidly aging society.
» K-Regio project MitoFit
» Oroboros Laboratory

MitoFit - hot topics

Johannes Burtscher, Patrick Schaefer, Luiz Felipe Garcia e Souza, Pablo Garcia-Roves, Enrico Calzia, Stephen Dozier, Ignazio Prieto, Verena Laner, Erich Gnaiger, Devin Manning, Pedro Neves at the MitoFit Science Camp in July 2016 in Kuehtai, Tyrol, Austria
» MitoFit Science Camp 2016 Kuehtai AT
» COST Action approved: MitoEAGLE
  • MitoFit quality control - new on MitoPedia
  1. MitoPedia: Sample preparations
  2. MitoPedia: SUIT
» Making a molecular map of exercise - NIH Common Fund



Concept

A physically active and nutritionally healthy life style induces regulatory mechanisms that maintain aerobic performance and support functional mitochondrial competence. Even in advancing age, exercise increases aerobic fitness and maintains muscle mitochondrial density above the sedentary benchmark, contributing to the high quality of life characteristic of alpine regions such as Tyrol. Functional mitochondrial competence and aerobic fitness reduce several age-related health risks, including cardiovascular and degenerative diseases, such as type 2 diabetes, neurodegenerative diseases (Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, Huntington’s), and several types of cancer. As a result of a sedentary life style and progression to obesity, the decline of muscle mitochondrial capacity may contribute to accelerated aging processes and development of degenerative diseases. Diagnostic evaluation of functional mitochondrial competence requires scientific and technological mitochondrial competence. MitoFit fit&well will combine the specialized scientific focus on mitochondrial research and exercise testing with the expertise of local companies of world-wide leadership in this expanding field. Beyond the added value emanating from the combination and coordination of these diagnostic elements, the consortium will collaborate on the implementation of refined and novel diagnostic protocols as a milestone towards an internationally recognized center of excellence, with an explicit focus on sport and clinical perspectives to address mitochondrial health and disease.
MitoFit Science Camp in July 2016 in Kuehtai, Tyrol, Austria: If muscle mitochondrial adaptations occur in response to high altitude is answered in a presentation by Adam Chicco, one of over 60 participants of the MitoFit Science Camp

Objectives

MitoFit combines the expertise of experienced partners in a unique corporate framework. MitoFit will establish a research and diagnostic laboratory network to form a Centre of Excellence in Mitochondrial Physiology, Pathology, Comprehensive Exercise Testing and Genetic Fingerprinting. Diagnostic analyses include cardiopulmonary (VO2max; CPX) and metabolic (31P-NMR; Ergospect) exercise testing, evaluation of mitochondrial performance (high-resolution respirometry; Oroboros Instruments), and genetic screening (mtDNA haplotypes, relevant nuclear-encoded genes). Refined state-of-the-art diagnostic protocols are extended and evaluated in a training programme under acute high-altitude hypoxia versus normoxic conditions with healthy control subjects. Exposure to acute hypoxia represents a typical condition for millions of individuals annually skiing or mountaineering in Austria and particularly in Tyrol. Comprehensive mitochondrial and exercise testing protocols will be developed and validated in these studies. Case studies will translate the scientific expertise into the clinical setting. As a result, MitoFit will offer and apply these diagnostic services for (i) monitoring of training programmes in competitive athletes, (ii) life style analyses of the general population, (iii) exercise interventions for preventive and therapeutic medicine, and (iv) clinical diagnosis of individual patients.

Technological and scientific innovation

Diagnosis of mitochondrial function has advanced to a new technological level by the introduction of high-resolution respirometry, and on a scientific level of innovation by multiple substrate-uncoupler-inhibitor titration protocols with permeabilized fibres from small muscle biopsies. Nevertheless, compared to the small needle biopsy, functional mt-diagnosis on far less invasive blood samples (thrombocytes) might provide a new perspective for large-scale screening of individual athletes, extended cohorts in clinical studies, and application for individual patients. Simultaneous measurement of mitochondrial respiration and additional parameters (mt-membrane potential by ion selective electrodes, hydrogen peroxide production by spectrofluorimetry coupled to the O2k) requires the development of new diagnostic protocols that can be applied to permeabilized muscle fibres and/or intact and permeabilized thrombocytes. Although conventional cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPX) provides insights into the coupling of external to cellular respiration, it mirrors insufficiently the metabolic processes in the contracting and recovering muscle. Thus, combining CPX and techniques assessing bioenergetic processes in the working muscles will undoubtedly increase the conclusiveness of exercise testing in athletes and patients. These diagnostic MultiSensor protocols in combination with comprehensive exercise testing and genetic fingerprinting will generate an innovative repertoire of diagnostic tests that can be offered in the context of sports and mitochondrial diseases.


From MitoCom to MitoFit – 2020 m and above

MitoFit Science Camp in July 2016 in Kuehtai, Tyrol, Austria: Martin Burtscher trying to answer the question whether living and exercising at moderate altitude is a health risk or even benefit
Join those who seek the special recreational and adventurous experience with physical exercise in the Alps. Your exercise is the gateway to your mitochondrial fitness.
MitoFit evolves as a unique network of practitioners in the high-end sector of recreation, sport and protective medicine, in collaboration with experts on mitochondrial physiology and mitochondrial medicine.
We all know that feeling of being well from head to toe – or from muscle to brain – up in the mountains. Scientists want to get to the basis of this wellbeing, to gain insights into invisible molecular functions: is it caused by the ’good air‘ we breathe, even though air gets very thin high up in the Alps? How do the lungs, blood, heart, brain, arms and legs – all organs and all somatic cells – react to altitude and relaxation in nature, to challenges in sport or to a short period of life on a mountain pasture?
Mitochondria are responsible for the energy supply in human and animal tissues; this is OXPHOS analysis - mitochondrial cell ergometry. With the Oroboros, we determine energy turnover of carbohydrates and fatty acids and quantify the efficiency of mitochondria in maintaining the vital body functions. In order to determine cellular fitness, parameters for oxidative stress and stress resistance are measured along with mitochondrial oxygen consumption. Biomedical research all over the world applies this method for the diagnosis of mitochondrial competence, especially in sports medicine and gerontology. The Oroboros, developed by the company Oroboros Instruments, is the world-wide leading instrument for diagnosing the aerobic capacity of mitochondria with the help of small samples of tissue or blood. Oroboros Instruments is located in Innsbruck, Austria. In the Mitochondrial Research Laboratory, the company tests the newest developments and develops standard protocols for OXPHOS analysis.
MitoCom
The logo of MitoCom Tyrol (now transformed to MitoFit) is based on MiPArt by Odra Noel. Further details: »MitoCom O2k-Fluorometer.


Impact on life style: Tyrol – a heart for sport

Mitochondrial knowledge will, with its innovative approach, arouse a new awareness of preventive medicine, to which a physically active and calorie-balanced lifestyle can contribute significantly. Of particular importance is “healthy aging”, a generally improved quality of life and a reduced risk of a multiplicity of degenerative diseases influenced by the mitochondria: e.g. obesity, diabetes 2, various forms of cancer and dementia. Mitochondrial competence will be made a reality to a larger proportion of the population and the regional identity strengthened both amongst our own population and amongst tourists through the offer of exercise-orientated leisure packages in the Alpine landscape of Tyrol.
Instrumental innovation and interdisciplinary cooperation in mitochondrial physiology lead to new perspectives of functional mitochondrial diagnosis. Check your mitochondrial health is conveyed to the public as a keyword for taking care of a physically active life style as an invaluable component of preventive and therapeutic medicine.
Linkages are being created by MitoFit between research and clinical/practical needs with regard to the very recently established Olympic centre at the Institute of Sport Science of the LFU in Innsbruck and the Altitude Training Centre in Kühtai near Innsbruck leading to optimization of diagnostic exercise testing and training strategies. Importantly, this project seeks to promote research on exercise effects at moderate altitude. Tyrol represents a unique location which is visited by several millions of skiers and mountaineers, annually. On the one hand, regular physical activity and probably also exposures to moderate altitudes up to about 2500 m may contribute to well-being and longevity. On the other hand, however, unaccustomed exercise and acute altitude exposure may trigger serious cardiovascular adverse events in subjects at risk. This initiative should contribute to a better understanding of mechanisms responsible for beneficial and adverse effects supporting the development of appropriate preventive measures.
Appreciation by politicians and communication with an aspirational general public are essential to benefit from world-class research, for comprehensive mitochondrial and exercise testing and implementation of exercise as a medicine, and the development of a scientific foundation that may allow us to translate the complex diagnostic results into a patient-related mitochondrial score. The MitoFit network will emphasize the connections to international mitochondrial networks, for exchange of expertise and standardization of diagnostic approaches, in a joint effort to helping mitochondrial patients, preventing numerous diseases and making a difference to society.


K-Regio MitoFit

See also


The project MitoFit highlights the benefits of mitochondrial fitness

K-Regio MitoFit

* English - »German


MitoFit Science Camp in July 2016 in Kuehtai, Tyrol, Austria: Johannes Burtscher, Patrick Schaefer, Luiz Felipe Garcia e Souza, Pablo Garcia-Roves, Enrico Calzia, Stephen Dozier, Ignazio Prieto, Verena Laner, Erich Gnaiger, Devin Manning, Pedro Neves

MitoFit

MitoFit in health and preventive medicine

Physical inactivity is one of the greatest drivers of metabolic dysregulation and preventable diseases in modern societies, and has an impact on ageing populations in particular. It is becoming increasingly apparent that high and robust mitochondrial capacities are central for sustained metabolic health throughout life. Active lifestyles increase mitochondrial capacities and reduce the risk of degenerative diseases. Despite the clear role of high and efficient mitochondrial capacities in preventing metabolic diseases, promoting health and improving life quality in ageing populations, there is currently no regimented, quantitative system, or database organised to routinely test, compare and monitor mitochondrial capacities within individuals, populations, or among populations. The Oroboros - established in 49 countries - is the only instrument with sufficient stability and reliability for quantitative high-resolution respirometry (HRR). This world-leading technology offers the unique potential for developing the quality control tools required to establish the Oroboros as a calibrated and standardised in vitro diagnostic device. Overall, we aim to gain a CE Mark and FDA approval for the Oroboros, following the innovations on the level of a quality control system, and to transform this high-resolution research instrument into an essential medical device to monitor metabolic health – maintaining mitochondria fit and well to live a healthier, longer life.
MitoFit Science Camp in July 2016 in Kuehtai, Tyrol, Austria: MitoFit-training session with Stefan Moser (Sporttherapie Mag. Huber, AT)

K-Regio project MitoFit

MitoFit
The project MitoFit is funded by the Land Tirol within the program K-Regio of Standortagentur Tirol.
The K-Regio project MitoFit aims at developing novel laboratory standards and diagnostic monitoring of a mitochondrial fitness score. MitoFit will provide a signature to stimulate health tourism in the Alpine setting, introducing a scientific perspective on the benefits of mitochondrial fitness ranging from outdoor sports to quality of life and healthy ageing supported by physiotherapy.


Applicant: Medical University of Innsbruck, A.Univ.-Prof. Dr. Erich Gnaiger
Application: 2015-04-24; Granted: 2015-09-16
Project duration: 2015-05-01 to 2018-04-30, extended to 2018-10-31
Total budget: € 1.26 Mill; financial support by Fonds Tiroler Zukunftsstiftung (LGBl. Nr. 88/1997) € 0.89 Mill.


» MitoFit Science Camp 2016 Kuehtai AT
» MitoFit K-Regio project report


Concept

MitoFit will provide a unique opportunity within fields of recreation, sports, wellness, lifestyle monitoring and preventive medicine programs. Collaborations with established regional initiatives will leverage on current research initiatives and established expertise in the measurement of mitochondrial function and competence. This will translate to tangible outcomes for the MitoFit concept as a marketable health, sports performance and medical diagnostic device. The establishment of the MitoFit-Knowledge Management Platform with a database reposited in the MitoFit Centre of Excellence (Fig. 1) will also provide a keystone to support the leadership of the mitochondrial monitoring instruments developed in translational research on mitochondrial competence (e.g. previous K-Regio project MitoCom) in close collaboration with local industrial partners.
The Oroboros and Oroboros FluoRespirometer, which are the gold standard for generating reliable quantitative respirometric data in OXPHOS analysis, will be the instruments of choice to build the MitoFit database. Standardized protocols developed by the MitoFit project will be streamlined for applications of the K-Regio project MitoFit. This will lead to a significant expansion of the world-wide market for the Oroboros, and drive the transition of the Oroboros from a well established specialized research tool to a standard health and biomedical instrument.
Figure 1: Structure of the MitoFit project. The development of the MitoFit- Knowledge Management Platform as an integrated module of the O2k technology system is in the centre of the project is. Strategies will be developed to pave the way towards obtaining a CE Mark (EU) and gaining regulatory approval by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA, US).  :::: Strategy development for hardware and software will be complemented by innovations in laboratory standards. A quality control system unique in the field of mitochondrial respirometry will be developed, from standardized protocols and sample preparation to the world-wide innovation of a proficiency ring test. These developments will be tested and applied in work packages introducing the MitoFit approach into the fields of lifestyle analyses based on diagnostic assays of mitochondrial function in blood cells. Health, sport and training programmes will be developed to improve mitochondrial fitness, with a focus on protective medicine, well-being and healthy ageing. The experience gained in implementing laboratory quality controls and during application developments will provide feedback into the structure and function of the MitoFit-Knowledge Management Platform.


Objectives

The objective is to achieve the transformation for the Oroboros from a research instrument to a medical device. The O2k is a high-end product for measuring mitochondrial function by high-resolution respirometry and is currently distributed in 49 countries world-wide. In an increasing number of cases, we are faced with demands on CE, FDA or equivalent approval for clinical diagnosis. Presently, there is no other instrument available on the market which meets such requirements. While continuing our strategy on Open innovation to maintain our technological leadership in mitochondrial respiratory research, the objective of the present project is to initiate an additional dimension of Strategic innovation towards standardization and comprehensive quality control as required for a medical device.

Technological and scientific innovation

The MitoFit-Knowledge Management Platform (KMP)
The MitoFit KMP will be developed as an integral component of the Oroboros technology. It will provide the first standardized measures to link human mitochondrial health to physiome data (heart rate, BMI, blood pressure, blood chemistry, VO2max). The technological ‘sole source’ status will be systematically secured. An increasing amount of respirometric data on mitochondrial physiology is generated world-wide, enlarging the theoretically available data base at an increasing speed. However, due to lacking standards as to how results are reported, most published data are not available for quantitative meta-analysis.
Even within research groups, data from different projects have to be tediously re-analyzed for quantitative comparison. By extending Oroboros applications to monitoring personal mitochondrial fitness and diagnosing an increasing range of health conditions, the development of a knowledge management platform will become even more important and mandatory for considerations on CE and FDA approval. The design of the MitoFit-Data Management System will provide the conceptual framework for strategic innovations related to a quality control system for standardization of instrumental quality tests and mitochondrial reference protocols, establishment of reference samples for proficiency tests, and guidelines for data analysis and presentation. Based on a collection of data obtained through this platform, users will be able to search from pre-defined fields or through full-text search for data, documents and a variety of areas of interest. In combination with web-based collaboration tools implemented in the software, the platform will both broaden the actually available data base for all researchers and stimulate the development of research networks.
Reference sample of cryopreserved mitochondria
The development of a reference sample for respirometry will provide enormous benefits for scientific research and open up new perspectives on clinical applications, enabling a presently unattainable level of quality control in respiratory studies which will (1) increase the scientific potential of on-going and newly initiated mitochondrial studies in basic and applied research. (2) The reference sample will provide the possibility for quality control of quantitative data for direct comparison and evaluation of functional mitochondrial diagnosis on patients monitored over the timecourse of their disease and treatment, and diagnosed by different clinical laboratories. (3) A reference sample can contribute significantly to the substitution and reduction of experiments with sacrificed animals, by (a) replacing animal tissue used for training and routine quality control, or (b) for methodological development, and (c) reducing the number of artefacts in experiments with animal or human tissue by detecting methodological deficiencies in routine quality control using the reference sample.
Cryopreservation of human blood cells
Obtaining tissue biopsies for the study of mitochondrial function is an invasive approach that requires a clinician to obtain the samples under strictly sterile conditions and that usually goes along with the need to immediately use the samples for measurements. The possibility to measure mitochondrial function in human blood cells will help to overcome these limitations by allowing a far less invasive sampling procedure applicable by anyone proficient in blood drawing and by enabling the collection and storage of samples for later measurements and analysis. It will also allow the repeated sampling of the same individual, as the burden of sampling is dramatically reduced. Altogether, the advantages of using cryopreserved human blood cells for respirometry will immensely widen the applicability of respirometry for the study of human physiology and will provide a significant stimulus for the entire research field.
MitoFit proficiency test
A proficiency ring test, probing the performance of participating laboratories, will be applied using the reference samples developed in a previous step. Measuring the respiration of reference samples at two pre-defined time points and following strictly defined experimental protocols, it will be possible for the first time to evaluate and compare the proficiency of different labs and to assess the reproducibility of measurements conducted, thereby having a measure of quality control at hand. Based on the outcome of the test, individual labs may set adequate steps to improve their performance and to develop lab SOPs supporting compliance with defined standard requirements.

Current state-of-the-art

Figure 2: Substrate-uncoupler-inhibitor titration (SUIT) protocols.
A: Combined determination of oxygen consumption and H2O2 flux by Oroboros FluoRespirometry in permeabilized HEK cells. Substrate and coupling states are shown in the upper and lower bars. Substrate (pathway) states are limited to N- and NS-linked respiration. From Makrecka- Kuka et al (2015).
B: Coupling/substrate control diagrams for experimental protocol design, including multiple substrate states for fatty acid oxidation, FAO (octanoylcarnitine & malate, OctM), N-linked (addition of glutamate, G), NS-linked (addition of succinate, S), and S-linked (addition of rotenone, Rot) respiration. Flux control ratios are normalized relative to ET capacity with convergent NS (&FAO) electron input. Arrows 1, 2 and 3 indicate different SUIT protocols with partially overlapping respiratory states. From Gnaiger (2014).
Knowledge Management Platform
Many research groups are working on extensive documentation of genetic, epigenetic, transcriptomic, proteomic, lipidomic and metabolomic datasets in basic and clinical research, including mitochondrial medicine. Relevant techniques include next-generation sequencing to determine the genome (nDNA and mtDNA), methylome, and transcriptome (RNA), and mass spectrometry (proteome, lipidome, K-Regio: MitoFit 4 MitoFit www.mitofit.org metabolome). Such data are available online through various portals, some of which provide Open Access to allow researchers to use the data for addressing their specific interests and working hypotheses.
The capacity and efficiency of energy transformation through the mitochondrial pathways of core energy metabolism represent key features of the mitochondrial phenotype, but no corresponding data base is available for mapping mitochondrial health versus disease in humans. Performance parameters of OXPHOS are not available in a consistent format for cataloguing and, therefore, are not represented in presently available databases. Quantitative comparability of data generated by different labs on OXPHOS performance is restricted due to different protocols applied for preparing experimental solutions (solution protocols) and lack of standardization of procedure protocols including instrumental performance protocols, mitochondrial and cell preparation protocols and experimental titration protocols (SUIT protocols; Fig. 2).
With more than 280 and 150 Oroboros instruments sold in the EU and the US, respectively, it appears that we are not required to obtain a CE Mark or FDA clearance or approval for the Oroboros. However, this status will change when extending the applications from a research instrument to a medical device intended to report personal mitochondrial fitness disposition results for a wide range of health conditions, including the propensity for degenerative and other complex diseases. According to our knowledge of the available literature, the Oroboros is the only instrument on the world-wide market providing system accuracy criteria compatible with implementation of a Quality Control System for use as an In Vitro Diagnostic (IVD) device.


MitoFit Workpackages

Workpackages

WP1
» The Oroboros from research instrument to medical device - MitoFit-Medical device
WP2
» MitoFit-Knowledge Management Platform - MitoFit-KMP
WP3
» Laboratory standards for high-resolution respirometry: towards a QCS - MitoFit-QCS
WP4
» Reference sample: cryopreserved mitochondria - development for functional control assays - MitoFit-Reference sample
WP5
» Human blood cells as study model of mitochondrial respiration and H2O2 production - MitoFit-Bloodcells
WP6
» Development of the MitoFit proficiency test - MitoFit-PT
WP7
» Development of a sport module: high altitude sprint training - MitoFit-Sport module
WP8
» Development of a physiotherapy module: effects of physical activity on cardiovascular risk factors in middle-aged subjects - MitoFit-Physiotherapy module
WP9
» Development of a training module - MitoFit-Training module


Partners

Medical University Innsbruck MUI: Universitätsklinik für Visceral-, Transplantations- und Thoraxchirurgie, D. Swarovski Forschungslabor, DSL (Ao. Univ.-Prof. Dr. Erich Gnaiger)

https://www.i-med.ac.at/patienten/ukl_transplant-chirurgie.html
http://icbi.i-med.ac.at/

LF-University Innsbruck LFU: Institut für Sportwissenschaften, ISW (Univ.-Prof. DDr. Martin Burtscher, Verena Menz, Dr. Hannes Gatterer)

http://www.uibk.ac.at/isw/

Oroboros SME: Oroboros Instruments GmbH, Innsbruck, ORO (Dr. Erich Gnaiger, Mag.a. Verena Laner)

http://wiki.oroboros.at/index.php/OROBOROS_INSTRUMENTS

WGT SME: WGT-Elektronik GmbH & Co KG, Kolsass, Tyrol, WGT (Philipp Gradl)

http://www.wgt.at

HLZ Kuehtai SME: Höhenleistungszentrum Betriebsg.m.b.H., Innsbruck, HLZ (Geschäftsführer Mag. Andreas Brix, Robert Valentini)

http://www.hoehentraining-kuehtai.at/

Sporttherapie Huber SME: Sporttherapie Mag. Huber GmbH, Innsbruck, STH (Mag. Reinhard Huber)

http://www.sporttherapie-huber.at

MUI = Medical University Innsbruck; LFU = Leopold-Franzens-University Innsbruck; SME = Small and medium-sized enterprise

External consultants

  • MUI: Department für Medizinische Statistik, Informatik und Gesundheitsökonomie, MSIG (Univ.-Doz. Dr. Georg Göbel)
https://www.i-med.ac.at/msig/
  • software security networks - ssn (Lukas Gradl)
http://www.ssn.at/
  • fancy tree films (Johannes Aitzetmüller)
http://www.fancytreefilms.com/
  • en.co.tec Schmid KG, Technisches Büro für Elektrotechnik (Dipl.- Ing. Martin Schmid)
http://www.encotec.at/

International strategic partners - Europe

ES Barcelona Garcia-Roves PM
DE Ulm Karabatsiakis A
SK Bratislava Sumbalova Z

International strategic partners - overseas

  • Goodpaster Bret H, Prof. Dr: Translational Research Institute for Metabolism and Diabetes, Florida Hospital, Sanford/Burnham Institute, Orlando, FL, US
US FL Orlando Goodpaster BH
NZ Auckland Hickey AJ
  • Molina Anthony JA, PhD: J. Paul Sticht Center on Aging, Dept Internal Medicine, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, US
US NC Winston-Salem Molina AJA
US NC Greenville Neufer PD
ZA Cape Town Ojuka EO


Becoming ‘MitoFit’ – a trend towards a new lifestyle?

With its innovative approach, MitoFit arouses a new awareness of preventive medicine, to which a physically active and calorie-balanced lifestyle can contribute significantly. Of particular importance is “healthy aging”, a generally improved quality of life and a reduced risk of a multiplicity of degenerative diseases influenced by the mitochondria: e.g. obesity, diabetes II, various forms of cancer and dementia. Mitochondrial competence will be made a reality to a larger proportion of the population and the regional identity strengthened both amongst our own population and amongst tourists through the offer of exercise-orientated leisure packages in the Alpine landscape of Tyrol.
Making our mitochondria fit – MitoFit and well – may strengthen the trend to a less sedentary, healthier and balanced lifestyle, supported by the growing evidence of the central role of mitochondrial function for an improved and prolonged quality of life.


Related projects

  1. COST Action » MitoEAGLE
  2. Tiroler Innovationsförderung » O2k-Innovation (Feb 2015 - Jan 2017)
  3. K-Regio MitoCom: » MitoCom (completed 2014)


MitoFit project news

2016

  • 003. 2016-05-06:
Dear colleague,
1st MitoFit Science Camp, Kuehtai (close to Innsbruck) – 2016, July 07 to 13.
We are looking forward to seeing you highly MitoFit at 2,020 m in Kuehtai,
Erich and Verena
  • 002. 2016-03-30:
Dear colleague,
We are happy to inform you that registration for the 1st MitoFit Science Camp is now open. Immediately following EBEC2016 (July 2-7), the MitoFit Science Camp will take place in Kuehtai (close to Innsbruck), Austria from July 7th to 13th.
  • High-level training in mitochondrial respiratory physiology,
  • Internationally renowned speakers – interlaboratory networking,
  • High-resolution respirometry - mitochondrial performance testing,
  • Discussions on fundamentals of quality control – MitoFit proficiency test
  • Find out more: » MitoFit Science Camp 2016 Kuehtai AT
Register now: » MitoFit SC 2016 Registration
We are looking forward to seeing you highly MitoFit at 2,020 m in Kuehtai,
Erich and Verena
  • 001. 2016-03-08:
We are delighted to inform the mitochondrial community about the COST Action 'Mitochondrial mapping: Evolution - Age - Gender - Lifestyle - Environment (MitoEAGLE)', which is going to be funded for four years:
» MitoEAGLE
Researchers from COST Member Countries and Cooperating States can join the Action. For more information (including Near Neighbour Countries and International Partner Countries) and modalities for joining, see:
» Join the COST Action CA15203 MitoEAGLE

2015

  • 020. 2015-12-22: Quote from Pedersen and Saltin (2015): ’.. it is now time that the health systems create the necessary infrastructure to ensure that supervised exercise can be prescribed as medicine.’  » Pedersen 2015 Scand J Med Sci Sports
MitoFit hot topics:
MitoFit Workshop on blood cell respirometry for mitochondrial research and diagnostic applications. Innsbruck, 2016-Jan-08:
Making a molecular map of exercise - NIH Common Fund:
As the end of the year approaches, we thank you for your positive feedback and cooperation, sending you season's greetings and all the best for a happy, successful, MitoFit and generally healthy New Year.
  • 019. 2015-12-10: From insulin-resistant obese to MitoFit – with aerobic exercise training: » Konopka_2015_Diabetes
  • 018. 2015-11-25: Performance tests on skeletal muscle mitochondria of the Inuit haplogroup reveal fitness information beyond the uncoupling hypothesis for adaptations to the arctic climate:  » Gnaiger 2015 Scand J Med Sci Sports
  • 017. 2015-11-16: MitoFit in the brain » Burtscher 2015 Mitochondrion
TIP2k
  • 016. 2015-10-20: In an effort to examine the comparability of data generated by different laboratories and across various studies, we are taking note of commonly used fatty acids being utilized to examine beta-oxidation.
Therefore, we would like to ask you the following:
  • What is your experience with examining fatty acid oxidation in permeabilized muscle fibres?
  • Which fatty acids do you use?
A) Octanoylcarnitine
B) Palmitylcarnitine
C) Other (please specify)
The results of this survey will be summarized in the O2k-Network discussion forum: » O2k-Network discussion forum
  • 015. 2015-09-24: The MitoFit project was approved by the Tyrolean Government with a budget of € 1.3 Mill. Our main aim is the development of novel laboratory standards and diagnostic monitoring of a mitochondrial fitness score. The Universities of Innsbruck and industry partners collaborate with international strategic partners in this ambitious programme:
» K-Regio MitoFit
MitoFit Training Camp 2016 Kuehtai AT: Immediately following EBEC 2016 organized by Paolo Bernardi in Riva del Garda, the first ‘MitoFit Training Camp’ will take place on 2016 July 7-13, at the High Altitude Training Center Kühtai at an altitude of 2020 m. The MitoFit Training Camp will provide a unique opportunity to receive first-hand introductions to state-of-the-art diagnostic monitoring of mitochondrial respiratory function. A wide range of areas will be covered on protective medicine, exercise physiology, mitochondrial pharmacology, aging, to comparative mitochondrial physiology (cell types, tissues, species).
» MitoFit Science Camp 2016 Kuehtai AT
Open Innovation: the O2k-Innovation is not yet in series production, but some special innovations are now available:
» TIP2k-Module with 200 µL (new) or 500 µl syringes, for steady-state hypoxia and more.
» Oroboros racks make experiments with SUIT protocols more convenient.
  • 013. 2015-07-31: To the heart of the Amazon - Phenotypic mitochondrial respiratory control differs widely from mouse to man. Does this mean that these hearts have different mitochondrial fitness? What can we learn from comparative mitochondrial physiology? Find out more: » MiPNet20.12 IOC103 Manaus
The Oroboros-team sends you best wishes for a MitoFit Summer
  • from this year's KrassFit/XLETIX challenge in Kühtai (Tyrol, Austria). » Oroboros MitoFit team KrassFit2015 Kuehtai
  • joining with Lemawork Ketema (Ethiopia): Wings for Life World Run champion 2014 and 2015, running 79.9 km (49.9 miles) and this year's Rio de Janeiro Marathon runner #2. » Becoming MitoFit


Feedback

  • .. the mito-fit paper on the elderly was great! Anthony Hickey; O2k-Network Lab: NZ Auckland Hickey AJ (2015-06-10).
  • Thank you for the update publication. It's quite inspiring. Ping Zheng (2015-06-09).
  • Thanks for sending this interesting study conducted in PBMC for the bioblast group. Marcus Oliveira; O2k-Network Lab: BR Rio de Janeiro Oliveira MF (2015-05-08).
  • This is the first glimpse I have seen of MitoFit, and I have to tell you it's brilliant! When we launched Team MitoCanada a few years back combined with all the recent research and correlation to general health and Mito health, it just seems like the natural progression. We are taking a new approach to mitochondrial health as well with MitoCanada and reading your webpage really confirms the need to consider the full spectrum of mitochondrial health as part of our awareness strategy. Blaine Penny, President and CEO of MitoCanada Foundation and winner of the Wings for Life World Run in Niagara Falls 2015 (2015-05-06).


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Default sorting: chronological. Empty fields appear first in ascending order. 
 YearReferenceMammal and modelTissue and cellStressDiseases
Bowen 2015 Eur J Heart Fail2015Bowen TS, Rolim NP, Fischer T, Baekkerud FH, Medeiros A, Werner S, Brønstad E, Rognmo O, Mangner N, Linke A, Schuler G, Silva GJ, Wisløff U, Adams V (2015) Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction induces molecular, mitochondrial, histological, and functional alterations in rat respiratory and limb skeletal muscle. Eur J Heart Fail 17:263-72.RatSkeletal muscleCardiovascular
Pedersen 2015 Scand J Med Sci Sports2015Pedersen BK, Saltin B (2015) Exercise as medicine - evidence for prescribing exercise as therapy in 26 different chronic diseases. Scand J Med Sci Sports 25:1-72. https://doi.org/10.1111/sms.12581HumanCancer
Cardiovascular
Diabetes
Neurodegenerative
Obesity
Parkinson's
Other
Neves 2014 J Nutr Biochem2014Neves FA, Cortez E, Bernardoa AF, Mattos ABM, Vieira AK, Malafaia TO, Thole AA, Rodrigues-Cunha ACS, Garcia-Souza EP, Sichieri R, Moura AS (2014) Heart energy metabolism impairment in Western-diet induced obese mice. J Nutr Biochem 25:50-57.MouseHeartObesity
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