4.6 Article

Experimental evaluation of velocity sensitivity for conglomerate reservoir rock in Karamay oil field

Journal

CELLS
Volume 12, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cells12101373

Keywords

cardiovascular disease (CVD); body mass index (BMI); Angiotensin II receptor AT2 (AT2R); Zucker diabetic fatty-female (ZDF-F); Zucker diabetic fatty-male (ZDF-M); Zucker lean-female (ZL-F); Zucker lean-male (ZL-M); obesity

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In this study, it was found that the new AT2R agonist NP-6A4 could attenuate heart disease and cardiac damage, increase AT2R expression, activate an 8-protein autophagy network, and improve autophagy marker expression. The protective effects of NP-6A4 were confirmed to act through AT2R. Therefore, NP-6A4 may be an effective drug for treating heart disease induced by obesity and pre-diabetes, especially in young obese women.
Background: Obese and pre-diabetic women have a higher risk for cardiovascular death than age-matched men with the same symptoms, and there are no effective treatments. We reported that obese and pre-diabetic female Zucker Diabetic Fatty (ZDF-F) rats recapitulate metabolic and cardiac pathology of young obese and pre-diabetic women and exhibit suppression of cardio-reparative AT2R. Here, we investigated whether NP-6A4, a new AT2R agonist with the FDA designation for pediatric cardiomyopathy, mitigate heart disease in ZDF-F rats by restoring AT2R expression. Methods: ZDF-F rats on a high-fat diet (to induce hyperglycemia) were treated with saline, NP-6A4 (10 mg/kg/day), or NP-6A4 + PD123319 (AT2R-specific antagonist, 5 mg/kg/day) for 4 weeks (n = 21). Cardiac functions, structure, and signaling were assessed by echocardiography, histology, immunohistochemistry, immunoblotting, and cardiac proteome analysis. Results: NP-6A4 treatment attenuated cardiac dysfunction, microvascular damage (-625%) and cardiomyocyte hypertrophy (-263%), and increased capillary density (200%) and AT2R expression (240%) (p < 0.05). NP-6A4 activated a new 8-protein autophagy network and increased autophagy marker LC3-II but suppressed autophagy receptor p62 and autophagy inhibitor Rubicon. Co-treatment with AT2R antagonist PD123319 suppressed NP-6A4's protective effects, confirming that NP-6A4 acts through AT2R. NP-6A4-AT2R-induced cardioprotection was independent of changes in body weight, hyperglycemia, hyperinsulinemia, or blood pressure. Conclusions: Cardiac autophagy impairment underlies heart disease induced by obesity and pre-diabetes, and there are no drugs to re-activate autophagy. We propose that NP-6A4 can be an effective drug to reactivate cardiac autophagy and treat obesity- and pre-diabetes-induced heart disease, particularly for young and obese women.

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