Diet-induced obese mouse hearts tolerate an acute high-fatty acid exposure that also increases ischemic tolerance.
Neoma T BoardmanTina M PedersenLine RossvollAnne D HafstadEllen AasumPublished in: American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology (2020)
An ischemic insult is accompanied by an acute increase in circulating fatty acid (FA) levels, which can induce adverse changes related to cardiac metabolism/energetics. Although chronic hyperlipidemia contributes to the pathogenesis of obesity-/diabetes-related cardiomyopathy, it is unclear how these hearts are affected by an acute high FA-load. We hypothesize that adaptation to chronic FA exposure enhances the obese hearts' ability to handle an acute high FA-load. Diet-induced obese (DIO) and age-matched control (CON) mouse hearts were perfused in the presence of low- or high FA-load (0.4 and 1.8 mM, respectively). Left ventricular (LV) function, FA oxidation rate, myocardial oxygen consumption, and mechanical efficiency were assessed, followed by analysis of myocardial oxidative stress, mitochondrial respiration, protein acetylation, and gene expression. Finally, ischemic tolerance was determined by examining LV functional recovery and infarct size. Under low-FA conditions, DIO hearts showed mild LV dysfunction, oxygen wasting, mechanical inefficiency, and reduced mitochondrial OxPhos. High FA-load increased FA oxidation rates in both groups, but this did not alter any of the above parameters in DIO hearts. In contrast, CON hearts showed FA-induced mechanical inefficiency, oxidative stress, and reduced OxPhos, as well as enhanced acetylation and activation of PPARα-dependent gene expression. While high FA-load did not alter functional recovery and infarct size in CON hearts, it increased ischemic tolerance in DIO hearts. Thus, this study demonstrates that acute FA-load affects normal and obese hearts differently and that chronically elevated circulating FA levels render the DIO heart less vulnerable to the disadvantageous effects of an acute FA-load.NEW & NOTEWORTHY An acute myocardial fat-load leads to oxidative stress, oxygen wasting, mechanical inefficiency, hyperacetylation, and impaired mitochondrial function, which can contribute to reduced ischemic tolerance. Following obesity/insulin resistance, hearts were less affected by a high fat-load, which subsequently also improved ischemic tolerance. This study highlights that an acute fat-load affects normal and obese hearts differently and that obesity renders hearts less vulnerable to the disadvantageous effects of an acute fat-load.
Keyphrases
- liver failure
- oxidative stress
- drug induced
- insulin resistance
- respiratory failure
- adipose tissue
- metabolic syndrome
- type diabetes
- gene expression
- left ventricular
- fatty acid
- weight loss
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- aortic dissection
- heart failure
- dna damage
- hepatitis b virus
- acute myocardial infarction
- dna methylation
- magnetic resonance
- high fat diet
- bariatric surgery
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- cardiovascular disease
- obese patients
- hydrogen peroxide
- computed tomography
- high fat diet induced
- endothelial cells
- hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- ejection fraction
- left atrial
- protein protein
- amino acid
- induced apoptosis