系统性缺失 ARRDC4 可改善糖尿病患者的心脏储备和运动能力

IF 16.5 1区 医学 Q1 CARDIAC & CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEMS
Circulation research Pub Date : 2024-07-19 Epub Date: 2024-07-01 DOI:10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.123.323158
Yoshinobu Nakayama, Satoru Kobayashi, Aliya Masihuddin, Syed Amir Abdali, A M Pramodh Bandara Seneviratne, Sachiyo Ishii, Jun Iida, Qiangrong Liang, Jun Yoshioka
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:运动不耐受是糖尿病患者预后不良的独立预测因素。高血糖与运动不耐受之间关联的内在机制仍未确定。我们最近证实,ARRDC4(含捕获素结构域蛋白 4)和 GLUT1(葡萄糖转运体 1)之间的相互作用可调节心脏代谢:为了确定这一机制是否广泛影响糖尿病并发症,我们研究了ARRDC4在糖尿病心脏和骨骼肌病变发病机制中的作用:高糖促进了MondoA向细胞核的转位,从而上调了Arrdc4的转录表达,增加了溶酶体GLUT1的转运,阻断了心肌细胞的葡萄糖转运,形成了一种反馈机制。ARRDC4 的这一作用在 2 型糖尿病患者的人类肌肉细胞中得到了证实。在多种类型的糖尿病小鼠模型中,长期高血糖会上调心肌 Arrdc4 的表达。然后,我们分析了胰岛素缺乏小鼠中高血糖诱导的心脏和骨骼肌异常。高血糖增加了高级糖化终产物,引起氧化和内质网应激,导致心脏和外周肌肉凋亡。然而,删除 Arrdc4 可增强组织葡萄糖转运和线粒体呼吸,保护心脏和肌肉免受组织损伤。应激血流动力学分析和跑步机力竭测试发现,Arrdc4基因敲除小鼠比野生型(WT)动物在糖尿病情况下具有更强的心肌肌力/同步储备和更高的运动耐力。虽然该机制涉及多个器官,但使用腺相关病毒进行的心脏特异性过表达(超过糖尿病期间观察到的水平)表明,高水平的心肌 ARRDC4 有可能通过与糖尿病患者体内的 GLUT1 相互作用干扰心脏代谢,从而导致运动不耐受。重要的是,ARRDC4突变小鼠品系表现出更强的运动耐受性,这表明通过破坏ARRDC4与GLUT1之间的相互作用对糖尿病心肌病具有潜在的治疗作用:结论:ARRDC4 是高血糖诱导的心肌和骨骼肌毒性的调节因子,它揭示了一个新的分子框架,将高血糖、心肌/骨骼肌病变和运动耐受不良联系在一起。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Systemic Deletion of ARRDC4 Improves Cardiac Reserve and Exercise Capacity in Diabetes.

Background: Exercise intolerance is an independent predictor of poor prognosis in diabetes. The underlying mechanism of the association between hyperglycemia and exercise intolerance remains undefined. We recently demonstrated that the interaction between ARRDC4 (arrestin domain-containing protein 4) and GLUT1 (glucose transporter 1) regulates cardiac metabolism.

Methods: To determine whether this mechanism broadly impacts diabetic complications, we investigated the role of ARRDC4 in the pathogenesis of diabetic cardiac/skeletal myopathy using cellular and animal models.

Results: High glucose promoted translocation of MondoA into the nucleus, which upregulated Arrdc4 transcriptional expression, increased lysosomal GLUT1 trafficking, and blocked glucose transport in cardiomyocytes, forming a feedback mechanism. This role of ARRDC4 was confirmed in human muscular cells from type 2 diabetic patients. Prolonged hyperglycemia upregulated myocardial Arrdc4 expression in multiple types of mouse models of diabetes. We analyzed hyperglycemia-induced cardiac and skeletal muscle abnormalities in insulin-deficient mice. Hyperglycemia increased advanced glycation end-products and elicited oxidative and endoplasmic reticulum stress leading to apoptosis in the heart and peripheral muscle. Deletion of Arrdc4 augmented tissue glucose transport and mitochondrial respiration, protecting the heart and muscle from tissue damage. Stress hemodynamic analysis and treadmill exhaustion test uncovered that Arrdc4-knockout mice had greater cardiac inotropic/chronotropic reserve with higher exercise endurance than wild-type animals under diabetes. While multiple organs were involved in the mechanism, cardiac-specific overexpression using an adenoassociated virus suggests that high levels of myocardial ARRDC4 have the potential to contribute to exercise intolerance by interfering with cardiac metabolism through its interaction with GLUT1 in diabetes. Importantly, the ARRDC4 mutation mouse line exhibited greater exercise tolerance, showing the potential therapeutic impact on diabetic cardiomyopathy by disrupting the interaction between ARRDC4 and GLUT1.

Conclusions: ARRDC4 regulates hyperglycemia-induced toxicities toward cardiac and skeletal muscle, revealing a new molecular framework that connects hyperglycemia to cardiac/skeletal myopathy to exercise intolerance.

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来源期刊
Circulation research
Circulation research 医学-外周血管病
CiteScore
29.60
自引率
2.00%
发文量
535
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: Circulation Research is a peer-reviewed journal that serves as a forum for the highest quality research in basic cardiovascular biology. The journal publishes studies that utilize state-of-the-art approaches to investigate mechanisms of human disease, as well as translational and clinical research that provide fundamental insights into the basis of disease and the mechanism of therapies. Circulation Research has a broad audience that includes clinical and academic cardiologists, basic cardiovascular scientists, physiologists, cellular and molecular biologists, and cardiovascular pharmacologists. The journal aims to advance the understanding of cardiovascular biology and disease by disseminating cutting-edge research to these diverse communities. In terms of indexing, Circulation Research is included in several prominent scientific databases, including BIOSIS, CAB Abstracts, Chemical Abstracts, Current Contents, EMBASE, and MEDLINE. This ensures that the journal's articles are easily discoverable and accessible to researchers in the field. Overall, Circulation Research is a reputable publication that attracts high-quality research and provides a platform for the dissemination of important findings in basic cardiovascular biology and its translational and clinical applications.
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