The failing heart is subject to elevated metabolic demands, adverse remodeling, chronic apoptosis, and ventricular dysfunction. The interplay among such pathologic changes is largely unknown. Several laboratories have identified a unique posttranslational modification that may have significant effects on cardiovascular function. The Olinked β-N-acetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAc) posttranslational modification (O-GlcNAcylation) integrates glucose metabolism with intracellular protein activity and localization. Because O-GlcNAc is derived from glucose, we hypothesized that altered O-GlcNAcylation would occur during heart failure and figure prominently in its pathophysiology. After 5 d of coronary ligation in WT mice, cardiac O-GlcNAc transferase (OGT; which adds O-GlcNAc to proteins) and levels of OGlcNAcylation were significantly (P < 0.05) elevated in the surviving remote myocardium. We used inducible, cardiac myocyte-specific Cre recombinase transgenic mice crossed with loxP-flanked OGT mice to genetically delete cardiomyocyte OGT (cmOGT KO) and ascertain its role in the failing heart. After tamoxifen induction, cardiac OGlcNAcylation of proteins and OGT levels were significantly reduced compared with WT, but not in other tissues. WT and cardiomyocyte OGT KO mice underwent nonreperfused coronary ligation and were followed for 4 wk. Although OGT deletion caused no functional change in sham-operated mice, OGT deletion in infarcted mice significantly exacerbated cardiac dysfunction compared with WT. These data provide keen insights into the pathophysiology of the failing heart and illuminate a previously unrecognized point of integration between metabolism and cardiac function in the failing heart. heart failure | metabolism | O-GlcNAc | remodeling | infarct
Background Cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure are associated with metabolic dysregulation and a state of chronic energy deficiency. Although several disparate changes in individual metabolic pathways have been described, there has been no global assessment of metabolomic changes in hypertrophic and failing hearts in vivo. Here, we investigated the impact of pressure overload and infarction on myocardial metabolism. Methods and Results Male C57BL/6J mice were subjected to transverse aortic constriction (TAC) or permanent coronary occlusion (myocardial infarction; MI). A combination of LC/MS/MS and GC/MS techniques was used to measure 288 metabolites in these hearts. Both TAC and MI were associated with profound changes in myocardial metabolism affecting up to 40% of all metabolites measured. Prominent changes in branched amino acids acids (BCAAs) were observed after 1 week of TAC and 5 days after MI. Changes in BCAAs after MI were associated with myocardial insulin resistance. Longer duration of TAC and MI led to a decrease in purines, acylcarnitines, fatty acids and several lysolipid and sphingolipid species, but a marked increase in pyrimidines as well as ascorbate, heme and other indices of oxidative stress. Cardiac remodeling and contractile dysfunction in hypertrophied hearts were associated also with large increases in myocardial, but not plasma, levels of the polyamines putrescine and spermidine as well as the collagen breakdown product prolylhydroxyproline. Conclusions These findings reveal extensive metabolic remodeling common to both hypertrophic and failing hearts that are indicative of extensive extracellular matrix remodeling, insulin resistance and perturbations in amino acid, lipid and nucleotide metabolism.
The regulation of cardiomyocyte hypertrophy is a complex interplay among many known and unknown processes. One specific pathway involves the phosphatase calcineurin, which regulates nuclear translocation of the essential cardiac hypertrophy transcription factor, nuclear factor of activated T-cells (NFAT). Although metabolic dysregulation is frequently described during cardiac hypertrophy, limited insights exist regarding various accessory pathways. One metabolically derived signal, beta-O-linked N-acetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAc), has emerged as a highly dynamic posttranslational modification of serine and threonine residues regulating physiological and stress processes. Given the metabolic dysregulation during hypertrophy, we hypothesized that NFAT activation is dependent on O-GlcNAc signaling. Pressure overload-induced hypertrophy (via transverse aortic constriction) in mice or treatment of neonatal rat cardiac myocytes with phenylephrine significantly enhanced global O-GlcNAc signaling. NFAT-luciferase reporter activity revealed O-GlcNAc-dependent NFAT activation during hypertrophy. Reversal of enhanced OGlcNAc signaling blunted cardiomyocyte NFAT-induced changes during hypertrophy. Taken together, these results demonstrate a critical role of O-GlcNAc signaling in NFAT activation during hypertrophy and provide evidence that O-GlcNAc signaling is coordinated with the onset and progression of cardiac hypertrophy. This represents a potentially significant and novel mechanism of cardiac hypertrophy, which may be of particular interest in future in vivo studies of hypertrophy.nuclear factor of activated t cells; transverse aortic constriction CARDIAC HYPERTROPHY REFLECTS a compensatory response to pressure or volume overload, sarcomeric abnormalities, or loss of contractile ability through partial death of the myocardium (6, 14). The development of pathological pressure overloadinduced hypertrophy has deleterious consequences on the heart and often progresses to decompensation and overt heart failure, the leading cause of death in the industrialized world (30). The molecular mechanisms contributing to cardiac hypertrophy are common to several stressors (25), involve the activation of the nuclear factor of activated T-cells (NFAT), and induce the fetal gene program (17). Intracellular Ca 2ϩ participates as an obligatory signaling molecule during hypertrophy after an increase in cardiac workload or in response to myocyte stretch (2). Elevated Ca 2ϩ levels activate the phosphatase calcineurin culminating in NFAT dephosphorylation and nuclear translocation of NFAT (17). The final macromolecular response involves an increase in cell size and protein synthesis (25) and is accompanied by an eventual energetic defect (7,14,30). Although several groups have investigated the metabolic defects accompanying cardiac hypertrophy, little attention has been given to the contribution of accessory pathways of glucose metabolism, such as the hexosamine biosynthetic pathway (see Refs. 20, 21 for review). The hexosamine biosynthetic pathw...
The singly coded gene O-linked--N-acetylglucosamine (O-GlcNAc) transferase (Ogt) resides on the X chromosome and is necessary for embryonic stem cell viability during embryogenesis. In mature cells, this enzyme catalyzes the posttranslational modification known as O-GlcNAc to various cellular proteins. Several groups, including our own, have shown that acute increases in protein O-GlcNAcylation are cardioprotective both in vitro and in vivo. Yet, little is known about how OGT affects cardiac function because total body knockout (KO) animals are not viable. Presently, we sought to establish the potential involvement of cardiomyocyte Ogt in cardiac maturation. Initially, we characterized a constitutive cardiomyocyte-specific (cm)OGT KO (c-cmOGT KO) mouse and found that only 12% of the c-cmOGT KO mice survived to weaning age (4 wk old); the surviving animals were smaller than their wild-type littermates, had dilated hearts, and showed overt signs of heart failure. Dysfunctional c-cmOGT KO hearts were more fibrotic, apoptotic, and hypertrophic. Several glycolytic genes were also upregulated; however, there were no gross changes in mitochondrial O 2 consumption. Histopathology of the KO hearts indicated the potential involvement of endoplasmic reticulum stress, directing us to evaluate expression of 78-kDa glucose-regulated protein and protein disulfide isomerase, which were elevated. Additional groups of mice were subjected to inducible deletion of cmOGT, which did not produce overt dysfunction within the first couple of weeks of deletion. Yet, long-term loss (via inducible deletion) of cmOGT produced gradual and progressive cardiomyopathy. Thus, cardiomyocyte Ogt is necessary for maturation of the mammalian heart, and inducible deletion of cmOGT in the adult mouse produces progressive ventricular dysfunction. cardiac function;
Readnower RD, Brainard RE, Hill BG, Jones SP. Standardized bioenergetic profiling of adult mouse cardiomyocytes.
Preclinical studies of animals with risk factors, and how those risk factors contribute to the development of cardiovascular disease and cardiac dysfunction, are clearly needed. One such approach is to feed mice a diet rich in fat (i.e. 60%). Here, we determined whether a high fat diet was sufficient to induce cardiac dysfunction in mice. We subjected mice to two different high fat diets (lard or milk as fat source) and followed them for over six months and found no significant decrement in cardiac function (via echocardiography), despite robust adiposity and impaired glucose disposal. We next determined whether antecedent and concomitant exposure to high fat diet (lard) altered the murine heart’s response to infarct-induced heart failure; high fat feeding during, or before and during, heart failure did not significantly exacerbate cardiac dysfunction. Given the lack of a robust effect on cardiac dysfunction with high fat feeding, we then examined a commonly used mouse model of overt diabetes, hyperglycemia, and obesity (db/db mice). db/db mice (or STZ treated wild-type mice) subjected to pressure overload exhibited no significant exacerbation of cardiac dysfunction; however, ischemia-reperfusion injury significantly depressed cardiac function in db/db mice compared to their non-diabetic littermates. Thus, we were able to document a negative influence of a risk factor in a relevant cardiovascular disease model; however, this did not involve exposure to a high fat diet. High fat diet, obesity, or hyperglycemia does not necessarily induce cardiac dysfunction in mice. Although many investigators use such diabetes/obesity models to understand cardiac defects related to risk factors, this study, along with those from several other groups, serves as a cautionary note regarding the use of murine models of diabetes and obesity in the context of heart failure.
The myocardial response to pressure overload involves coordination of multiple transcriptional, post-transcriptional, and metabolic cues. The previous studies show that one such metabolic cue, O-GlcNAc, is elevated in the pressure-overloaded heart, and the increase in O-GlcNAcylation is required for cardiomyocyte hypertrophy in vitro. Yet, it is not clear whether and how O-GlcNAcylation participates in the hypertrophic response in vivo. Here, we addressed this question using patient samples and a preclinical model of heart failure. Protein O-GlcNAcylation levels were increased in myocardial tissue from heart failure patients compared with normal patients. To test the role of OGT in the heart, we subjected cardiomyocyte-specific, inducibly deficient Ogt (i-cmOgt−/−) mice and Ogt competent littermate wild-type (WT) mice to transverse aortic constriction. Deletion of cardiomyocyte Ogt significantly decreased O-GlcNAcylation and exacerbated ventricular dysfunction, without producing widespread changes in metabolic transcripts. Although some changes in hypertrophic and fibrotic signaling were noted, there were no histological differences in hypertrophy or fibrosis. We next determined whether significant differences were present in i-cmOgt−/− cardiomyocytes from surgically naïve mice. Interestingly, markers of cardiomyocyte dedifferentiation were elevated in Ogt-deficient cardiomyocytes. Although no significant differences in cardiac dysfunction were apparent after recombination, it is possible that such changes in dedifferentiation markers could reflect a larger phenotypic shift within the Ogt-deficient cardiomyocytes. We conclude that cardiomyocyte Ogt is not required for cardiomyocyte hypertrophy in vivo; however, loss of Ogt may exert subtle phenotypic differences in cardiomyocytes that sensitize the heart to pressure overload-induced ventricular dysfunction.
Synopsis During cardiac remodeling, the heart generates higher levels of reactive species; yet an intermediate “compensatory” stage of hypertrophy is associated with a greater ability to withstand oxidative stress. The mechanisms underlying this protected myocardial phenotype are poorly understood. We examined how a cellular model of hypertrophy deals with electrophilic insults, such as would occur upon ischemia or in the failing heart. For this, we measured energetics in control and phenylephrine (PE)-treated rat neonatal cardiac myocytes (NRCMs) under basal conditions and when stressed with 4-hydroxynonenal (HNE). PE treatment caused hypertrophy as indicated by augmented atrial natriuretic peptide and increased cellular protein content. Hypertrophied myocytes demonstrated a 2.5-fold increase in ATP-linked oxygen consumption and a robust augmentation of oligomycin-stimulated glycolytic flux and lactate production. Hypertrophied myocytes displayed a protected phenotype that was resistant to HNE-induced cell death and a unique bioenergetic response characterized by a delayed and abrogated rate of oxygen consumption and a twofold increase in glycolysis upon HNE exposure. This augmentation of glycolytic flux was not due to increased glucose uptake, suggesting that electrophile stress results in utilization of intracellular glycogen stores to support the increased energy demand. Hypertrophied myocytes also had an increased propensity to oxidize HNE to 4-hydroxynonenoic acid and sustained less protein damage due to acute HNE insults. Inhibition of aldehyde dehydrogenase resulted in bioenergetic collapse when myocytes were challenged with HNE. The integration of electrophile metabolism with glycolytic and mitochondrial energy production appears to be important for maintaining myocyte homeostasis under conditions of increased oxidative stress.
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