4.8 Article

Comprehensive quantification of fuel use by the failing and nonfailing human heart

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 370, Issue 6514, Pages 364-+

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.abc8861

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NHLBI [HL126797, F30 HL142186-01A1]
  2. Blavatnik Family Foundation
  3. American Diabetes Association [1-17-PDF-076]
  4. NIH [1DP1DK113643, 5T32HL007915]
  5. NIDDK [DK114103]
  6. NIH Diabetes Research Center grant [P30 DK019525]

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The heart consumes circulating nutrients to fuel lifelong contraction, but a comprehensive mapping of human cardiac fuel use is lacking. We used metabolomics on blood from artery, coronary sinus, and femoral vein in 110 patients with or without heart failure to quantify the uptake and release of 277 metabolites, including all major nutrients, by the human heart and leg. The heart primarily consumed fatty acids and, unexpectedly, little glucose; secreted glutamine and other nitrogen-rich amino acids, indicating active protein breakdown, at a rate similar to 10 times that of the leg; and released intermediates of the tricarboxylic acid cycle, balancing anaplerosis from amino acid breakdown. Both heart and leg consumed ketones, glutamate, and acetate in direct proportionality to circulating levels, indicating that availability is a key driver for consumption of these substrates. The failing heart consumed more ketones and lactate and had higher rates of proteolysis. These data provide a comprehensive and quantitative picture of human cardiac fuel use.

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