| Literature DB >> 31381993 |
Hyoung Kyu Kim1, Jouhyun Jeon2, In-Sung Song1, Hae Jin Heo1, Seung Hun Jeong1, Le Thanh Long1, Vu Thi Thu1, Tae Hee Ko1, Min Kim1, Nari Kim1, Sung Ryul Lee1, Jae-Seong Yang2, Mi Seon Kang3, Jung-Mo Ahn4, Je-Yoel Cho4, Kyung Soo Ko1, Byoung Doo Rhee1, Bernd Nilius5, Nam-Chul Ha6, Ippei Shimizu7, Tohru Minamino7, Kyoung Im Cho8, Young Shik Park9, Sanguk Kim10, Jin Han11.
Abstract
Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) shows therapeutic potential as an endogenous target in cardiovascular diseases. Although it is involved in cardiovascular metabolism and mitochondrial biology, its mechanisms of action are unclear. We investigated how BH4 regulates cardiovascular metabolism using an unbiased multiple proteomics approach with a sepiapterin reductase knock-out (Spr-/-) mouse as a model of BH4 deficiency. Spr-/- mice exhibited a shortened life span, cardiac contractile dysfunction, and morphological changes. Multiple proteomics and systems-based data-integrative analyses showed that BH4 deficiency altered cardiac mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. Along with decreased transcription of major mitochondrial biogenesis regulatory genes, including Ppargc1a, Ppara, Esrra, and Tfam, Spr-/- mice exhibited lower mitochondrial mass and severe oxidative phosphorylation defects. Exogenous BH4 supplementation, but not nitric oxide supplementation or inhibition, rescued these cardiac and mitochondrial defects. BH4 supplementation also recovered mRNA and protein levels of PGC1α and its target proteins involved in mitochondrial biogenesis (mtTFA and ERRα), antioxidation (Prx3 and SOD2), and fatty acid utilization (CD36 and CPTI-M) in Spr-/- hearts. These results indicate that BH4-activated transcription of PGC1α regulates cardiac energy metabolism independently of nitric oxide and suggests that BH4 has therapeutic potential for cardiovascular diseases involving mitochondrial dysfunction.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular metabolism; Mitochondrial biogenesis; PGC1α; Proteomics; Tetrahydrobiopterin
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31381993 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbadis.2019.07.018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Basis Dis ISSN: 0925-4439 Impact factor: 5.187