Morphine induces physiological, structural, and molecular benefits in the diabetic myocardium.
Alice E Zemljic-HarpfLouise E See HoeJan M SchillingJuan P Zuniga-HertzAlexander NguyenYash J VaishnavGianna J BelzaBoris P BudionoPiyush M PatelBrian P HeadWolfgang H DillmannSushil K MahataJason N PeartDavid M RothJohn P HeadrickHemal H PatelPublished in: FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (2021)
The obesity epidemic has increased type II diabetes mellitus (T2DM) across developed countries. Cardiac T2DM risks include ischemic heart disease, heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, intolerance to ischemia-reperfusion (I-R) injury, and refractoriness to cardioprotection. While opioids are cardioprotective, T2DM causes opioid receptor signaling dysfunction. We tested the hypothesis that sustained opioid receptor stimulus may overcome diabetes mellitus-induced cardiac dysfunction via membrane/mitochondrial-dependent protection. In a murine T2DM model, we investigated effects of morphine on cardiac function, I-R tolerance, ultrastructure, subcellular cholesterol expression, mitochondrial protein abundance, and mitochondrial function. T2DM induced 25% weight gain, hyperglycemia, glucose intolerance, cardiac hypertrophy, moderate cardiac depression, exaggerated postischemic myocardial dysfunction, abnormalities in mitochondrial respiration, ultrastructure and Ca2+ -induced swelling, and cell death were all evident. Morphine administration for 5 days: (1) improved glucose homeostasis; (2) reversed cardiac depression; (3) enhanced I-R tolerance; (4) restored mitochondrial ultrastructure; (5) improved mitochondrial function; (6) upregulated Stat3 protein; and (7) preserved membrane cholesterol homeostasis. These data show that morphine treatment restores contractile function, ischemic tolerance, mitochondrial structure and function, and membrane dynamics in type II diabetic hearts. These findings suggest potential translational value for short-term, but high-dose morphine administration in diabetic patients undergoing or recovering from acute ischemic cardiovascular events.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- diabetic rats
- weight gain
- cardiovascular events
- type diabetes
- left ventricular
- glycemic control
- high glucose
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- chronic pain
- cell death
- drug induced
- pain management
- high dose
- patients undergoing
- body mass index
- depressive symptoms
- coronary artery disease
- metabolic syndrome
- cell proliferation
- binding protein
- skeletal muscle
- poor prognosis
- wound healing
- electronic health record
- cardiovascular disease
- long non coding rna
- weight loss
- stem cell transplantation
- heart failure
- single molecule
- risk assessment
- sleep quality
- endothelial cells
- human health
- blood pressure
- hepatitis b virus
- wastewater treatment
- machine learning
- cerebral ischemia
- atomic force microscopy
- high intensity
- climate change
- respiratory failure
- anaerobic digestion