Metabolic remodelling of glucose, fatty acid and redox pathways in the heart of type 2 diabetic mice.
Sonia CortassaViviane de Menezes CaceresCarlo Gabriele TocchettiMichel BernierRafael de CaboNazareno PaolocciSteven J SollottMiguel A AonPublished in: The Journal of physiology (2018)
Type-2 diabetes (T2DM) leads to reduced myocardial performance, and eventually heart failure. Excessive accumulation of lipids and glucose is central to T2DM cardiomyopathy. Previous data showed that palmitate (Palm) or glutathione preserved heart mitochondrial energy/redox balance under excess glucose, rescuing β-adrenergic-stimulated cardiac excitation-contraction coupling. However, the mechanisms underlying the accompanying improved contractile performance have been largely ignored. Herein we explore in intact heart under substrate excess the metabolic remodelling associated with cardiac function in diabetic db/db mice subjected to stress given by β-adrenergic stimulation with isoproterenol and high glucose compared to their non-diabetic controls (+/+, WT) under euglycaemic conditions. When perfused with Palm, T2DM hearts exhibited improved contractility/relaxation compared to WT, accompanied by extensive metabolic remodelling as demonstrated by metabolomics-fluxomics combined with bioinformatics and computational modelling. The T2DM heart metabolome showed significant differences in the abundance of metabolites in pathways related to glucose, lipids and redox metabolism. Using a validated computational model of heart's central catabolism, comprising glucose and fatty acid (FA) oxidation in cytoplasmic and mitochondrial compartments, we estimated that fluxes through glucose degradation pathways are ∼2-fold lower in heart from T2DM vs. WT under all conditions studied. Palm addition elicits improvement of the redox status via enhanced β-oxidation and decreased glucose uptake, leading to flux-redirection away from redox-consuming pathways (e.g. polyol) while maintaining the flux through redox-generating pathways together with glucose-FA 'shared fuelling' of oxidative phosphorylation. Thus, available FAs such as Palm may help improve function via enhanced redox balance in T2DM hearts during peaks of hyperglycaemia and increased workload.
Keyphrases
- heart failure
- blood glucose
- type diabetes
- fatty acid
- glycemic control
- atrial fibrillation
- left ventricular
- electron transfer
- mass spectrometry
- cardiovascular disease
- hydrogen peroxide
- endothelial cells
- machine learning
- ms ms
- artificial intelligence
- insulin resistance
- blood pressure
- microbial community
- amino acid
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- wound healing
- ionic liquid
- drug induced