Literature DB >> 30333300

Diabetes with heart failure increases methylglyoxal modifications in the sarcomere, which inhibit function.

Maria Papadaki1, Ronald J Holewinski2, Samantha Beck Previs3, Thomas G Martin1, Marisa J Stachowski1, Amy Li3, Cheavar A Blair4, Christine S Moravec5, Jennifer E Van Eyk2, Kenneth S Campbell4, David M Warshaw3, Jonathan A Kirk1.   

Abstract

Patients with diabetes are at significantly higher risk of developing heart failure. Increases in advanced glycation end products are a proposed pathophysiological link, but their impact and mechanism remain incompletely understood. Methylglyoxal (MG) is a glycolysis byproduct, elevated in diabetes, and modifies arginine and lysine residues. We show that left ventricular myofilament from patients with diabetes and heart failure (dbHF) exhibited increased MG modifications compared with nonfailing controls (NF) or heart failure patients without diabetes. In skinned NF human and mouse cardiomyocytes, acute MG treatment depressed both calcium sensitivity and maximal calcium-activated force in a dose-dependent manner. Importantly, dbHF myocytes were resistant to myofilament functional changes from MG treatment, indicating that myofilaments from dbHF patients already had depressed function arising from MG modifications. In human dbHF and MG-treated mice, mass spectrometry identified increased MG modifications on actin and myosin. Cosedimentation and in vitro motility assays indicate that MG modifications on actin and myosin independently depress calcium sensitivity, and mechanistically, the functional consequence requires actin/myosin interaction with thin-filament regulatory proteins. MG modification of the myofilament may represent a critical mechanism by which diabetes induces heart failure, as well as a therapeutic target to avoid the development of or ameliorate heart failure in these patients.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cardiology; Cell Biology; Diabetes; Heart failure; Proteomics

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30333300      PMCID: PMC6237482          DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.121264

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JCI Insight        ISSN: 2379-3708


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