4.5 Article

Stimulus specific changes of energy metabolism in hypertrophied heart

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR CARDIOLOGY
Volume 46, Issue 6, Pages 952-959

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.yjmcc.2009.01.013

Keywords

Mitochondrial biogenesis; Hypertrophy; Fatty acid oxidation; Mitochondrial respiration; Remodelling; PGC-1 alpha; Oxidative capacity; Stress; Hormonal activation; Exercise training; Hypertension; Pregnancy

Funding

  1. European Union [LSHM-CT-2005-018833/EUGeneHeart]

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Cardiac energy metabolism is a determinant of the response to hypertrophic stimuli. To investigate how it responds to physiological or pathological stimuli, we compared the energetic status in models of hypertrophy induced by physiological stimuli (pregnancy or treadmill running) and by pathological stimulus (spontaneously hypertensive rats, SHR) in 15 week-old female rats, leading to a 10% cardiac hypertrophy. Late stage of compensated hypertrophy was also studied in 25 week-old SHR (35% of hypertrophy). Markers of cardiac remodelling did not follow a unique pattern of expression: in trained rats, only ANF was increased; in gravid rats, calcineurin activation and BNP expression were reduced while beta-MHC expression was enhanced; all markers were clearly up-regulated in 25 week-old SHR. Respiration of permeabilized fibers revealed a 17% increase in oxidative capacity in trained rats only. Mitochondrial enzyme activities, expression of the master regulator PGC-1 alpha and mitochondrial transcription factor A, and content of mitochondrial DNA were not consistently changed, suggesting that compensated hypertrophy does not involve alterations of mitochondrial biogenesis. Mitochondrial fatty acid utilization tended to increase in trained rats and decreased by 14% in 15 week-old SHR. Expression of markers of lipid oxidation, PPAR alpha and its down-stream targets MCAD and CPTI, was up-regulated after training and tended to decrease in gravid and 15 week-old SHR rats. Taken together these results show that there is no univocal pattern of cardiac adaptation in response to physiological or pathological hypertrophic stimuli, suggesting that other factors could play a role in determining adaptation of energy metabolism to increased workload. (C) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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