| Literature DB >> 28004807 |
David A Brown1, Justin B Perry1, Mitchell E Allen1, Hani N Sabbah2, Brian L Stauffer3, Saame Raza Shaikh4, John G F Cleland5, Wilson S Colucci6, Javed Butler7, Adriaan A Voors8, Stefan D Anker9, Bertram Pitt10, Burkert Pieske11, Gerasimos Filippatos12, Stephen J Greene13, Mihai Gheorghiade14.
Abstract
Heart failure is a pressing worldwide public-health problem with millions of patients having worsening heart failure. Despite all the available therapies, the condition carries a very poor prognosis. Existing therapies provide symptomatic and clinical benefit, but do not fully address molecular abnormalities that occur in cardiomyocytes. This shortcoming is particularly important given that most patients with heart failure have viable dysfunctional myocardium, in which an improvement or normalization of function might be possible. Although the pathophysiology of heart failure is complex, mitochondrial dysfunction seems to be an important target for therapy to improve cardiac function directly. Mitochondrial abnormalities include impaired mitochondrial electron transport chain activity, increased formation of reactive oxygen species, shifted metabolic substrate utilization, aberrant mitochondrial dynamics, and altered ion homeostasis. In this Consensus Statement, insights into the mechanisms of mitochondrial dysfunction in heart failure are presented, along with an overview of emerging treatments with the potential to improve the function of the failing heart by targeting mitochondria.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28004807 PMCID: PMC5350035 DOI: 10.1038/nrcardio.2016.203
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Rev Cardiol ISSN: 1759-5002 Impact factor: 32.419
Figure 1Energy supply–demand matching in health and heart failure
The delicate balance between cardiac demands for energy and supply of energy is tipped in heart failure, in which energy supply cannot match demand. Next-generation therapeutics can improve on existing standard-of-care therapies by bolstering mitochondrial energy production. ACE, angiotensin-converting enzyme; ARB, angiotensin II-receptor blocker; ETC, electron transport chain; HFpEF, heart failure with preserved ejection fraction; HFrEF, heart failure with reduced ejection fraction; ROS, reactive oxygen species.
Figure 2Impaired mitochondrial capacity and function in heart failure
Decreased capacity of mitochondria to generate and transfer energy within heart cells results in energy deficits, which influences all cellular processes that require energy, most notably the processes of contraction and relaxation.
Bioenergetic changes in human heart failure
| Patient characteristics ( | ATP | PCr | PCr/ATP | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NYHA class II (29), class III (8)[ | NR | NR | ↓ | Decrease in PCr/ATP ratio in patients with HFpEF |
| NYHA class I (10), class III (8), class IV (1)[ | NR | NR | ↓ | Decrease in PCr/ATP ratio in HCM correlated with presence of fibrotic |
| LVH (20); LVH and CHF (10); no LVH (10)[ | ↓ | ↓ | ↓ | Decrease in ATP flux through CK; 30% decrease in PCr/ATP ratio |
| NYHA class I (1), class II (7), class III (7), | ↓ | ↓ | NR | — |
| HCM gene mutations in | NR | NR | ↓ | 30% reduction in patients with HCM compared with controls; reduction |
| HHD (NYHA class 0 [10]) | = | = | ↓ | No change in ATP in AS or HHD; 35% decrease in ATP in DCM 28% decrease in PCr in AS, 51% in DCM, no change in HHD 25% decrease in PCr/ATP ratio in HHD |
| AS (NYHA class II [7], class III [3]) | = | ↓ | NR | |
| DCM (NYHA class II [1], class III [9])[ | ↓ | ↓ | NR | |
| AS (10); five followed up[ | NR | NR | ↓ | Decrease in PCr/ATP before aortic valve repair |
| HHD (11)[ | NR | NR | ↓ | — |
| Chronic mitral regurgitation (22)[ | NR | NR | ↓ | — |
| HCM (14)[ | NR | NR | ↓ | — |
| DCM (43 total; 6 restrictive cardiomyopathy, 10 | ↓ | NR | NR | Decrease in ATP in DCM |
| AI (9; NYHA class average 2.44) or | NR | NR | ↓ | Significant reduction in PCr/ATP ratio in patients with AS; trend towards a reduction in patients with AI Significant decrease in PCr/ATP ratio for all patients in NYHA class III, but not those in class I or II |
| DCM (23; NYHA class average 2.7)[ | NR | NR | ↓ | — |
| AS (41)[ | ↓ | ↓ | NR | — |
| Severe AS (27)[ | NR | NR | ↓ | Hand-grip strength tests (marker of cardiac health) employed in patients |
| HCM (19)[ | NR | NR | ↓ | — |
| DCM and CHF (NYHA class I [1], class II [3], | NR | NR | = | No change with dobutamine infusion |
| DCM (9), HCM (8)[ | NR | NR | ↓ | Decreased PCr/ATP ratio in HCM, but not DCM |
| CAD (14), DCM (19 total; NYHA class II [4], | NR | NR | ↓ | Decreased PCr/ATP ratio in DCM Trend for decreased PCr/ATP ratio in CAD Relationship exists between severity of HF and decrease in PCr/ATP ratio |
| DCM (19), ICM (11)[ | = | NR | NR | No change in ATP levels in DCM biopsies Lower ATP levels in ICM, but not significantly different |
| Aortic valve disease (6), AI (8)[ | NR | NR | ↓ | Decreased PCr/ATP ratio in patients being treated for heart failure |
| DCM (20)[ | NR | NR | ↓ | — |
| DCM (6), severe LVH (6), mild LVH (5)[ | NR | NR | = | No change in PCr/ATP ratio in LVH or DCM |
AI, aortic insufficiency; AS, aortic stenosis; CAD, coronary artery disease; CHF, congestive heart failure; CK, creatine kinase; DCM, dilated cardiomyopathy; HCM, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy; HFpEF, heart failure with preserved ejection fraction; HHD; hypertensive heart disease; ICM, insertable cardiac monitor; LVH, left ventricular hypertrophy; NR, not reported; PCr, phosphocreatine.
Figure 3Mitochondrial contribution across multifaceted symptoms of heart failure
Aberrant mitochondrial energy production is involved in many symptoms commonly found in patients with heart failure, including skeletal muscle dysfunction and renal pathologies. LV, left ventricular.
Figure 4Impaired mitochondrial energy production along the inner membrane
Enzyme complexes responsible for energy production are packed into the mitochondrial inner membrane, often with the help of phospholipids such as cardiolipin. Failing mitochondria often display altered morphology, decreased ATP-generating capacity, heightened production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), abnormal cardiolipin levels, and impaired supercomplexes.