| Literature DB >> 27346292 |
Shudong Wang1, Manyu Luo2, Zhiguo Zhang1, Junlian Gu3, Jing Chen3, Kristen McClung Payne4, Yi Tan5, Yuehui Wang6, Xia Yin6, Xiang Zhang7, Gilbert C Liu3, Kupper Wintergerst5, Quan Liu6, Yang Zheng8, Lu Cai9.
Abstract
Childhood obesity often leads to cardiovascular diseases, such as obesity-related cardiac hypertrophy (ORCH), in adulthood, due to chronic cardiac inflammation. Zinc is structurally and functionally essential for many transcription factors; however, its role in ORCH and underlying mechanism(s) remain unclear and were explored here in mice with obesity induced with high-fat diet (HFD). Four week old mice were fed on either HFD (60%kcal fat) or normal diet (ND, 10% kcal fat) for 3 or 6 months, respectively. Either diet contained one of three different zinc quantities: deficiency (ZD, 10mg zinc per 4057kcal), normal (ZN, 30mg zinc per 4057kcal) or supplement (ZS, 90mg zinc per 4057kcal). HFD induced a time-dependent obesity and ORCH, which was accompanied by increased cardiac inflammation and p38 MAPK activation. These effects were worsened by ZD in HFD/ZD mice and attenuated by ZS in HFD/ZS group, respectively. Also, administration of a p38 MAPK specific inhibitor in HFD mice for 3 months did not affect HFD-induced obesity, but completely abolished HFD-induced, and zinc deficiency-worsened, ORCH and cardiac inflammation. In vitro exposure of adult cardiomyocytes to palmitate induced cell hypertrophy accompanied by increased p38 MAPK activation, which was heightened by zinc depletion with its chelator TPEN. Inhibition of p38 MAPK with its specific siRNA also prevented the effects of palmitate on cardiomyocytes. These findings demonstrate that ZS alleviates but ZD heightens cardiac hypertrophy in HFD-induced obese mice through suppressing p38 MAPK-dependent cardiac inflammatory and hypertrophic pathways.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac hypertrophy; Obesity; P38 MAPK; Zinc supplement
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27346292 DOI: 10.1016/j.toxlet.2016.06.020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxicol Lett ISSN: 0378-4274 Impact factor: 4.372