4.7 Article

Mechanical and metabolic rescue in a type II diabetes model of cardiomyopathy by targeted gene transfer

Journal

MOLECULAR THERAPY
Volume 13, Issue 5, Pages 987-996

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2006.01.002

Keywords

gene therapy; heart failure; SERCA2a; energetic function; diabetes mellitus

Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [K08 HL069842, K01 HL076659, HL71763, HL057263, R01 HL078691] Funding Source: Medline

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The Otsuka-Long-Evans Tokushima Fatty rat represents a model for spontaneous non-insulin-dependent type 11 diabetes mellitus (DM), characterized by diastolic dysfunction and associated with abnormal calcium handling and decrease in sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca 2(+)-ATPase (SERCA2a) expression. The aim of this study was to examine whether SERCA2a gene transfer can restore the energetic deficiency and left ventricular (LV) function in this model. DM rats were randomized to receive adenovirus carrying either the SERCA2a gene (DM + Ad.SERCA2a) or the beta-galactosidase gene (DM + Acl.beta Gal) or saline (DM + saline). LV mechanoenergetic function was measured in cross-circulated heart preparations 3 days after infection. In DM, end-systolic pressure at 0.1 ml intraballoon water (ESP0.1) was low and end-diastolic pressure at 0.1 ml intraballoon water (EDP0.1) was high (22 mm Hg), compared with non-DM (EDP0.1 12 mm Hg). In DM + Ad.SERCA2a, however, ESP0.1 was increased over 200 mm Hg and EDP0.1 was decreased to 7 mm Hg. LV relaxation rate was fast in DM + Ad.SERCA(2)a, but slow in the other DM groups. There was no difference in relation between cardiac oxygen consumption per beat and systolic pressure-volume area among all groups. Finally, the oxygen cost of LV contractility in DM was about three times as high as that of normal. In DM + Ad.SERCA2a, the oxygen cost decreased to control levels, but in DM + Ad.pGal/DM + saline it remained high. In DM failing hearts, the high oxygen cost indicates energy wasting, which contributes to the contractile dysfunction observed in diabetic cardiomyopathy. SERCA2a gene transfer transforms this inefficient energy utilization into a more efficient state and restores systolic and diastolic function to normal.

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