4.7 Article

Empagliflozin does not reverse lipotoxicity-induced impairment in human myeloid angiogenic cell bioenergetics

Journal

CARDIOVASCULAR DIABETOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12933-022-01461-4

Keywords

Myeloid angiogenic cells; Empagliflozin; Stearic acid; Cell metabolism; Oxygen consumption

Funding

  1. Italian Diabete Ricerca Foundation
  2. Eli Lilly Italy
  3. University of Parma

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In this study, it was found that stearic acid altered the bioenergetics of human myeloid angiogenic cells, while empagliflozin possibly inhibited mitochondrial respiration to counteract the lipotoxicity induced by stearic acid.
Background Empagliflozin can curb inflammation and oxidative stress, through sodium-proton exchanger (NHE) inhibition, in a model of lipotoxicity in human myeloid angiogenic cells (MAC), which mediate endothelial repairing processes. Aim of this study is to assess in human MAC whether: (1) Stearic acid (SA) induced inflammation and increase in oxidant stress is accompanied by bioenergetic alterations; (2) empagliflozin anti-lipotoxic action is concomitant with coherent changes in bioenergetic metabolism, possibly via NHE blockade. Methods MAC were isolated from peripheral blood of healthy volunteers and incubated in the presence/absence of SA (100 mu M for 3 h) with/without empagliflozin (EMPA 100 mu M) or amiloride (Ami 100 mu M) for 1 h. Cell respiration (oxygen consumption rate OCR) and anaerobic glycolysis (measured as proton production rate) were recorded in real-time by Seahorse technology, and ATP production (anaerobic glycolysis- and oxphos-derived) rates were calculated. Results SA, at the concentration causing inflammation and increased oxidant stress, altered cell bioenergetics of human MAC, with overall reductions in basal OCR and oxphos-derived ATP production (all p < 0.05), pointing to mitochondrial alterations. EMPA, at the concentration counteracting SA-induced lipotoxicity, both alone and in the presence of SA, caused NHE-independent extensive bioenergetic alterations (from p < 0.05 to p < 0.01), greater than those induced by SA alone. Conclusions In human MAC: (1) SA altered cell bioenergetics, concomitantly with inflammation and oxidant stress; (2) EMPA possibly inhibited mitochondrial respiration, (3) the protective effect of EMPA against SA-induced lipotoxicity was unlikely to be mediated through bioenergetic metabolism.

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