Metabolic, structural and biochemical changes in diabetes and the development of heart failure.
Kim L HoQutuba G KarwiDavid ConnollySimran PherwaniEzra B KetemaJohn R UssherGary D LopaschukPublished in: Diabetologia (2022)
Diabetes contributes to the development of heart failure through various metabolic, structural and biochemical changes. The presence of diabetes increases the risk for the development of cardiovascular disease (CVD), and since the introduction of cardiovascular outcome trials to test diabetic drugs, the importance of improving our understanding of the mechanisms by which diabetes increases the risk for heart failure has come under the spotlight. In addition to the coronary vasculature changes that predispose individuals with diabetes to coronary artery disease, diabetes can also lead to cardiac dysfunction independent of ischaemic heart disease. The hyperlipidaemic, hyperglycaemic and insulin resistant state of diabetes contributes to a perturbed energy metabolic milieu, whereby the heart increases its reliance on fatty acids and decreases glucose oxidative rates. In addition to changes in cardiac energy metabolism, extracellular matrix remodelling contributes to the development of cardiac fibrosis, and impairments in calcium handling result in cardiac contractile dysfunction. Lipotoxicity and glucotoxicity also contribute to impairments in vascular function, cardiac contractility, calcium signalling, oxidative stress, cardiac efficiency and lipoapoptosis. Lastly, changes in protein acetylation, protein methylation and DNA methylation contribute to a myriad of gene expression and protein activity changes. Altogether, these changes lead to decreased cardiac efficiency, increased vulnerability to an ischaemic insult and increased risk for the development of heart failure. This review explores the above mechanisms and the way in which they contribute to cardiac dysfunction in diabetes.
Keyphrases
- cardiovascular disease
- type diabetes
- heart failure
- left ventricular
- glycemic control
- dna methylation
- oxidative stress
- gene expression
- coronary artery disease
- extracellular matrix
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- blood glucose
- cardiovascular events
- dna damage
- coronary artery
- insulin resistance
- adipose tissue
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- atrial fibrillation
- metabolic syndrome
- genome wide
- cardiovascular risk factors
- weight loss
- pulmonary hypertension
- signaling pathway
- acute heart failure
- blood pressure
- aortic valve
- heat shock protein