4.5 Article

Protein kinase-D1 overexpression prevents lipid-induced cardiac insulin resistance

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR CARDIOLOGY
Volume 76, Issue -, Pages 208-217

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.yjmcc.2014.08.017

Keywords

Cardiomyopathy; Fatty acid transport; Glucose transport; Insulin resistance; Protein kinase D

Funding

  1. transnational University Limburg (tUL)
  2. European Community [LSHM-CT-2004-005272]
  3. NWO support grant [91110016]
  4. VIDI-Innovational Research Grant from the Netherlands Organization of Scientific Research (NWO-ALW grant) [864.10.007]

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In the insulin resistant heart, energy fuel selection shifts away from glucose utilization towards almost complete dependence on long-chain fatty acids (LCFA). This shift results in excessive cardiac lipid accumulation and eventually heart failure. Lipid-induced cardiomyopathy may be averted by strategies that increase glucose uptake without elevating LCFA uptake. Protein kinase-D1 (PKD1) is involved in contraction-induced glucose, but not LCFA, uptake allowing to hypothesize that this kinase is an attractive target to treat lipid-induced cardiomyopathy. For this, cardiospecific constitutively active PKD1 overexpression (caPKD1)-mice were subjected to an insulin resistance-inducing high fat-diet for 20-weeks. Substrate utilization was assessed by microPET and cardiac function by echocardiography. Cardiomyocytes were isolated for measurement of substrate uptake, lipid accumulation and insulin sensitivity. Wild-type mice on a high fat-diet displayed increased basal myocellular LCFA uptake, increased lipid deposition, greatly impaired insulin signaling, and loss of insulin-stimulated glucose and LCFA uptake, which was associated with concentric hypertrophic remodeling. The caPKD1 mice on high-fat diet showed none of these characteristics, whereas on low-fat diet a shift towards cardiac glucose utilization in combination with hypertrophy and ventricular dilation was observed. In conclusion, these data suggest that PKD pathway activation may be an attractive therapeutic strategy to mitigate lipid accumulation, insulin resistance and maladaptive remodeling in the lipid-overloaded heart, but this requires further investigation. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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