Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8474422 | Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2015 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Diabetic hearts are subject to more extensive ischemia/reperfusion (ISC/REP) damage. This study examined the efficiency of citric acid cycle (CAC) flux and the transfer of cytosolic reducing equivalents into the mitochondria for oxidative support of cardiac work following ISC/REP in hearts of c57bl/6 (NORM) and type 2 diabetic, db/db mouse hearts. Flux through the CAC and malate-aspartate shuttle (MA) were monitored via dynamic 13C NMR of isolated hearts perfused with 13C palmitate + glucose. MA flux was lower in db/db than NORM. Oxoglutarate malate carrier (OMC) was elevated in the db/db heart, suggesting a compensatory response to low NADHc. Baseline CAC flux per unit work (rate-pressure-product, RPP) was similar between NORM and db/db, but ISC/REP reduced the efficiency of CAC flux/RPP by 20% in db/db. ISC/REP also increased UCP3 transcription, indicating potential for greater uncoupling. Therefore, ISC/REP induces inefficient carbon utilization through the CAC in hearts of diabetic mice due to the combined inefficiencies in NADHc transfer per OMC content and increased uncoupling via UCP3. Ischemia and reperfusion exacerbated pre-existing mitochondrial defects and metabolic limitations in the cytosol of diabetic hearts. These limitations and defects render diabetic hearts more susceptible to inefficient carbon fuel utilization for oxidative energy metabolism.
Keywords
UCP3CACMVO2OMCrPPLCFADM2UCP2nuclear magnetic resonancedb/db Mouselong chain fatty acidFatty acid oxidationischemia/reperfusionNMRdb/dbType 2 diabetes mellitusMalate–aspartate shuttleFAOmyocardial oxygen consumptionRate pressure productMitochondriaNormuncoupling protein 2Uncoupling protein 3Uncoupling proteinCitric acid cyclereducing equivalents
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Authors
Natasha H. Banke, E. Douglas Lewandowski,