Enhancing cardiac glycolysis causes an increase in PDK4 content in response to short-term high-fat diet.
Maria F NewhardtAlbert BatushanskySatoshi MatsuzakiZachary T YoungMelinda WestNgun Cer ChinLuke I SzwedaMichael KinterKenneth M HumphriesPublished in: The Journal of biological chemistry (2019)
The healthy heart has a dynamic capacity to respond and adapt to changes in nutrient availability. Metabolic inflexibility, such as occurs with diabetes, increases cardiac reliance on fatty acids to meet energetic demands, and this results in deleterious effects, including mitochondrial dysfunction, that contribute to pathophysiology. Enhancing glucose usage may mitigate metabolic inflexibility and be advantageous under such conditions. Here, we sought to identify how mitochondrial function and cardiac metabolism are affected in a transgenic mouse model of enhanced cardiac glycolysis (GlycoHi) basally and following a short-term (7-day) high-fat diet (HFD). GlycoHi mice constitutively express an active form of phosphofructokinase-2, resulting in elevated levels of the PFK-1 allosteric activator fructose 2,6-bisphosphate. We report that basally GlycoHi mitochondria exhibit augmented pyruvate-supported respiration relative to fatty acids. Nevertheless, both WT and GlycoHi mitochondria had a similar shift toward increased rates of fatty acid-supported respiration following HFD. Metabolic profiling by GC-MS revealed distinct features based on both genotype and diet, with a unique increase in branched-chain amino acids in the GlycoHi HFD group. Targeted quantitative proteomics analysis also supported both genotype- and diet-dependent changes in protein expression and uncovered an enhanced expression of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4 (PDK4) in the GlycoHi HFD group. These results support a newly identified mechanism whereby the levels of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate promote mitochondrial PDK4 levels and identify a secondary adaptive response that prevents excessive mitochondrial pyruvate oxidation when glycolysis is sustained after a high-fat dietary challenge.
Keyphrases
- high fat diet
- fatty acid
- insulin resistance
- adipose tissue
- left ventricular
- mouse model
- oxidative stress
- type diabetes
- cell death
- heart failure
- physical activity
- weight loss
- high fat diet induced
- small molecule
- skeletal muscle
- poor prognosis
- metabolic syndrome
- reactive oxygen species
- immune response
- blood pressure
- nitric oxide
- toll like receptor
- body mass index
- glycemic control
- inflammatory response