| Literature DB >> 29202762 |
Jake Russell1, Eugene F Du Toit1, Jason N Peart1, Hemal H Patel2, John P Headrick3,4.
Abstract
Cardiovascular disease, predominantly ischemic heart disease (IHD), is the leading cause of death in diabetes mellitus (DM). In addition to eliciting cardiomyopathy, DM induces a 'wicked triumvirate': (i) increasing the risk and incidence of IHD and myocardial ischemia; (ii) decreasing myocardial tolerance to ischemia-reperfusion (I-R) injury; and (iii) inhibiting or eliminating responses to cardioprotective stimuli. Changes in ischemic tolerance and cardioprotective signaling may contribute to substantially higher mortality and morbidity following ischemic insult in DM patients. Among the diverse mechanisms implicated in diabetic impairment of ischemic tolerance and cardioprotection, changes in sarcolemmal makeup may play an overarching role and are considered in detail in the current review. Observations predominantly in animal models reveal DM-dependent changes in membrane lipid composition (cholesterol and triglyceride accumulation, fatty acid saturation vs. reduced desaturation, phospholipid remodeling) that contribute to modulation of caveolar domains, gap junctions and T-tubules. These modifications influence sarcolemmal biophysical properties, receptor and phospholipid signaling, ion channel and transporter functions, contributing to contractile and electrophysiological dysfunction, cardiomyopathy, ischemic intolerance and suppression of protective signaling. A better understanding of these sarcolemmal abnormalities in types I and II DM (T1DM, T2DM) can inform approaches to limiting cardiomyopathy, associated IHD and their consequences. Key knowledge gaps include details of sarcolemmal changes in models of T2DM, temporal patterns of lipid, microdomain and T-tubule changes during disease development, and the precise impacts of these diverse sarcolemmal modifications. Importantly, exercise, dietary, pharmacological and gene approaches have potential for improving sarcolemmal makeup, and thus myocyte function and stress-resistance in this ubiquitous metabolic disorder.Entities:
Keywords: Cardioprotection; Caveolae; Cholesterol; Diabetes; Fatty acids; Glucose transport; Infarction; Phospholipids
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29202762 PMCID: PMC5716308 DOI: 10.1186/s12933-017-0638-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiovasc Diabetol ISSN: 1475-2840 Impact factor: 9.951
Changes in myocardial ischemic tolerance and cardioprotection in animal models of DM
| Species—model | Duration or age | Ischemic tolerance | Effect on cardioprotection | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type 1 DM | ||||
| Mouse—STZ | 1 week | ⇓ | ⇓ RPostC | [ |
| 2 week | ⇔ | ⇓ IPostC | [ | |
| 4–5 week | ⇔ | ⇓ IPostC, ⇓ ACE inhibition | [ | |
| Rat—STZ | 1 week | ⇑ | ⇓ HOPreC | [ |
| 2 week | ⇑ | ⇔ IPreC | [ | |
| 2 week | ⇔ | ⇓ Opioid | [ | |
| 2 week | ⇔ | ⇓ Opioid | [ | |
| 2 week | ⇔ | ⇓ Opioid | [ | |
| 2 week | ⇓ | ⇓ Sevoflurane | [ | |
| 4 week | ⇔ | ⇓ Erythropoietin | [ | |
| 4 week | ⇓ | ⇓ APN, ⇓ IPostC | [ | |
| 4–5 week | ⇓ | ⇓ IPostC, ⇓ Sevoflurane | [ | |
| 6 week | ⇓ | ⇓ IPreC | [ | |
| 6 week | ⇔ | ⇓ IPreC | [ | |
| 8 week | ⇓ | ⇓ IPostC | [ | |
| 8 week | ⇓ | ⇓ APN, ⇓ IPostC | [ | |
| 8 week | ⇓ | ⇓ IPreC | [ | |
| 8 week | ⇓ | ⇓ Adenosine | [ | |
| 9 week | ⇔ | ⇓ Sevoflurane | [ | |
| 12 week | ⇓ | ⇓ IPostC | [ | |
| Unreported | ⇔ | ⇓ Opioid | [ | |
| Dog—alloxan/STZ | 3 week | ⇔ | ⇓ Isoflurane | [ |
| 3 week | ⇔ | ⇓ IPreC | [ | |
| Rabbit—alloxan | 5–6 week | ⇔ | ⇓ LPreC | [ |
| TYPE 2 DM | ||||
| Mouse—HFD | 8 week | ⇓ | ⇓APN | [ |
| 12 week | ⇓ | ⇓β3-AR | [ | |
| Mouse— | 8–10 week old | ⇓ | ⇓IPreC | [ |
| Mouse— | 10–12 week old | ⇓ | ⇓IPostC | [ |
| 12–14 week old | ⇔ | ⇓IPostC | [ | |
| Unreported | ⇔ | ⇔Infra-red light | [ | |
| 12 week old | Not tested | ⇔H2S PreC | [ | |
| Rat—STZ/HFD | 6 week | ⇔ | ⇔S1P | [ |
| Rat—HFD | 4 week | ⇔ | ⇔Erythropoietin | [ |
| 8 week | ⇑ | ⇓Sevoflurane | [ | |
| Rat—ZDF | 12 week old | ⇔ | ⇔Glutamate | [ |
| 16 week old | ⇑ | ⇓IPreC | [ | |
| Rat—ZO | 10–12 week old | ⇓ | ⇓IPreC, ⇓Diazoxide, ⇓HePreC | [ |
| Rat—GK | 12 week old | ⇔ | ⇓PPAR | [ |
| Rat—OLETF | 25–30 week old | ⇓ | ⇓Erythropoietin | [ |
| Rat—mtFHH | 12–14 week old | ⇔ | ⇓Isoflurane | [ |
HFD high fat diet, ZDF Zucker diabetic fatty, ZO Zucker obese, GK Goto-Kakizaki, OLETF Otsuka Long-Evans-Tokushima fatty, mtFHH T2D crossbreed with mtDNA from fawn hooded hypertensive rats, IPreC ischaemic preconditioning, IPostC ischaemic postconditioning, HOPreC hyperoxic preconditioning, HePreC helium preconditioning, LPreC ischaemic late preconditioning, RPreC remote preconditioning, S1P sphingosine-1-phosphate, APN adiponectin, β -AR β3-adrenergic receptor, w weeks
Cardiac sarcolemmal composition changes in models of T1DM
| Sample | Chol | FFA | TRI | Phospholipid | Saturated FAs | Unsaturated FAs | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heart | ⇑ | ⇔ ∑PL | [ | ||||
| Ventricle | ⇑ | ⇑ | [ | ||||
| Ventricle | ⇑ LPC | [ | |||||
| Heart | ⇓ 20:4, 22:4, 22:5 | [ | |||||
| Heart | ⇑ | ⇔ PC | (PC) ⇓16:0 ⇑18:0 | (PC) ⇓ 20:4, ⇑ 18:2 | [ | ||
| Heart | (PE) ⇓ 18:0 | ⇓ 22:4 (PE) | [ | ||||
| Heart | ⇔ CGP | (CGP) ⇓ 16:0 | (CGP) ⇓ 20:4, ⇑ 18:2 | [ | |||
| Ventricle | ⇑ EGP | (CGP, EGP) ⇓ 16:0 | (CGP, EGP) | [ | |||
| Heart | ⇑ EGP, PME, PI | (EGP) ⇑ 18:0, 16:0 | (EGP) ⇑ 18:2 | [ | |||
| Sarcol-emma | ⇑ | ⇑ ∑PL, CGP, EGP, SGP | (PC) ⇑ 16:0 | (PC) ⇓ 20:4, ⇑ 18:2, 18:3 | [ | ||
| Heart | ⇑ | ⇑ | ⇑ | ⇑ ∑PL | [ | ||
| Heart | ⇑ | ⇑ | ⇑ | ⇑ PE, SM, LPL | ⇑ ∑Sat FA | ⇓ ∑Unsat FA, ⇓ ∑n − 3, ⇓ ∑n − 6 | [ |
Changes (up or down) in levels of myocardial or sarcolemmal lipids in models of T1DM are summarized. Sarcolemmal lipid changes are not well defined in models of T2DM. Changes in specific saturated and unsaturated fatty acids species are indicated, with shortened numerical descriptions reflecting numbers of carbons and double bonds (e.g. palmitic acid, 16:0; stearic acid, 18:0; linoleic acid, 18:2; docosahexaenoic acid, 22:6)
CGP choline glycerophospholipids, EGP ethanolamine glycerophospholipids, IGP inositol glycerophospholipids, Chol cholesterol, CL cardiolipin, FAs fatty acids, FFA free fatty acid, LPC lysophosphatidylcholine, LPL lysophospholipid, NEFA non-esterified fatty acid, PC phosphatidylcholine, PE phosphatidylethanolamine, PI phosphatidylinositol, PL phospholipid, PMC plasmenylcholine, PME plasmenylethanolamine, PS phosphatidylserine, SGP serine glycerophospholipids, SM sphingomyelin, TRI triglyceride
Fig. 1a Sarcolemmal makeup and caveolar domains. Planar lipid rafts are more ordered elements of the sarcolemma, containing greater sphingolipid and cholesterol levels and forming signaling microdomain platforms. A subset of rafts, caveolae, localize signaling integral to ischemic tolerance and cardioprotection, including NOS, GPCRs, RTKs and coupled effector molecules. Caveolins are critical to caveolae formation and function and protective signaling. b Modulation of caveolae/caveolins and related cardioprotective signaling in DM. Diabetes may exaggerate mitochondrial dysfunction and associated death, while individual elements of DM may disrupt caveolar control and caveolin expression: (i) hyperglycemia-dependent PKCβ2 activation may suppress caveolin-3 expression/localization; (ii) saturated fats (e.g. palmitate) may displace or depress caveolin-3. Disruption of caveolar control and caveolins will limit protective signaling to mitochondria, including caveolin-3 translocation/modulation. Potential determinants of caveolin-3 expression and caveolar function include PKCβ2, saturated fats vs. n-3 PUFAs, AC (adenylate cyclase) and FAK (focal adhesion kinase) signaling, myocardin activity and physical activity
Fig. 2Sarcolemmal phospholipid signaling via phospholipases. AA arachidonic acid, DAG 1,2-diacylglycerol, IP3 inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate, PA phosphatidic acid, PC phosphatidylcholine, PIP phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate, PLA phospholipase A2, PLC phospholipase C, PLD phospholipase D