4.7 Article

Altered cholesterol homeostasis in critical illness-induced muscle weakness: effect of exogenous 3-hydroxybutyrate

Journal

CRITICAL CARE
Volume 25, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13054-021-03688-1

Keywords

Sepsis; Muscle weakness; Cholesterol; Ketone

Funding

  1. Flemish Government [METH14/06]
  2. Research Foundation Flanders [G.0C78.17N, G.0694.21N]
  3. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union [2017-785809]
  4. Baxter Healthcare

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This research explores the association between cholesterol concentrations and muscle weakness in critically ill patients and septic mice, as well as the impact of 3-hydroxybutyrate supplementation on cholesterol homeostasis. Results suggest that low cholesterol levels are linked to critical illness-induced muscle weakness and that 3-hydroxybutyrate may offer protective effects through altering cholesterol metabolism.
Background Muscle weakness is a complication of critical illness which hampers recovery. In critically ill mice, supplementation with the ketone body 3-hydroxybutyrate has been shown to improve muscle force and to normalize illness-induced hypocholesterolemia. We hypothesized that altered cholesterol homeostasis is involved in development of critical illness-induced muscle weakness and that this pathway can be affected by 3-hydroxybutyrate. Methods In both human critically ill patients and septic mice, the association between circulating cholesterol concentrations and muscle weakness was assessed. In septic mice, the impact of 3-hydroxybutyrate supplementation on cholesterol homeostasis was evaluated with use of tracer technology and through analysis of markers of cholesterol metabolism and downstream pathways. Results Serum cholesterol concentrations were lower in weak than in non-weak critically ill patients, and in multivariable analysis adjusting for baseline risk factors, serum cholesterol was inversely correlated with weakness. In septic mice, plasma cholesterol correlated positively with muscle force. In septic mice, exogenous 3-hydroxybutyrate increased plasma cholesterol and altered cholesterol homeostasis, by normalization of plasma mevalonate and elevation of muscular, but not hepatic, expression of cholesterol synthesis genes. In septic mice, tracer technology revealed that 3-hydroxybutyrate was preferentially taken up by muscle and metabolized into cholesterol precursor mevalonate, rather than TCA metabolites. The 3-hydroxybutyrate protection against weakness was not related to ubiquinone or downstream myofiber mitochondrial function, whereas cholesterol content in myofibers was increased. Conclusions These findings point to a role for low cholesterol in critical illness-induced muscle weakness and to a protective mechanism-of-action for 3-hydroxybutyrate supplementation.

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