| Literature DB >> 34094822 |
Yanan He1, Wei Huang1, Chen Zhang1, Lumeng Chen1, Runchun Xu1, Nan Li1, Fang Wang2, Li Han3, Ming Yang2, Dingkun Zhang1.
Abstract
Heart failure (HF) is a global public health problem with high morbidity and mortality. A large number of studies have shown that HF is caused by severe energy metabolism disorders, which result in an insufficient heart energy supply. This deficiency causes cardiac pump dysfunction and systemic energy metabolism failure, which determine the development of HF and recovery of heart. Current HF therapy acts by reducing heart rate and cardiac preload and afterload, treating the HF symptomatically or delaying development of the disease. Drugs aimed at cardiac energy metabolism have not yet been developed. In this review, we outline the main characteristics of cardiac energy metabolism in healthy hearts, changes in metabolism during HF, and related pathways and targets of energy metabolism. Finally, we discuss drugs that improve cardiac function via energy metabolism to provide new research ideas for the development and application of drugs for treating HF.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac dysfunction; Energy deficit; Energy metabolism; Heart failure; Hormones; Natural products; Substrate metabolism; Synthetic drugs
Year: 2020 PMID: 34094822 PMCID: PMC8144890 DOI: 10.1016/j.apsb.2020.10.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Pharm Sin B ISSN: 2211-3835 Impact factor: 11.413
Figure 1The energy metabolism process of fatty acid, glucose and ketone body. Various metabolic substrates are transported to the cytoplasm to form corresponding intermediate product, such as pyruvate, fatty acyl CoA, etc. These intermediates enter the mitochondrial matrix through a specific transport system and generate NADH, FADH2, GTP through the TCA cycle, fatty acid oxidation and other pathways. Then NADH and FADH2 produce ATP through the electron transfer chain, which provides energy for cardiomyocytes.
Figure 2Energy produce of glucose (A) and fatty acid (B) oxidation. In an ideal state, 1 mol glucose is converted into 2 mol pyruvic acid and 2 mol NADH. 1 mol pyruvic acid can produce 1 mol acetyl CoA and 1 mol NADH. 1 mol acetyl CoA can generate 1 mol ATP, 3 mol NADH and 1 mol FADH2 after one TCA cycle. 1 mol NADH and FADH2 can generate corresponding 2.5 mol ATP and 1.5 mol ATP through electron chain transfer respectively. 1 mol glucose is completely oxidized to produce 30 mol ATP. 1 mol fatty acid (20C) consumes 2 ATP can produce 1 mol fatty acyl CoA (20C). After β oxidation, 10 mol of acetyl-CoA can be generated by 1 mol fatty acyl CoA (20C), and then enter the TCA cycle. Therefore, 1 mol of fatty acid can be completely oxidized to generate 134 mol of ATP.
Biological functions of sirtuin proteins related to energy metabolism.
| Protein | Location | Enzyme activity | Biological functions related to energy metabolism |
|---|---|---|---|
| SIRT1 | Nucleus | Deacetylase | SIRT1 controls gluconeogenesis and glycolysis in the liver by activating PGC-1, but does not regulate the effect of PGC-1 on mitochondrial genes SIRT1 inhibits PPAR- SIRT1 inhibits the expression of uncoupling protein 2 gene and regulates insulin secretion of islet B cells |
| SIRT2 | Cytoplasm | Deacetylase | SIRT2 promotes deacetylated hepatocyte nuclear factor (FOXO1) to bind to PPAR SIRT2 deacetylates phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase, FOXO1, and PGC-1 |
| SIRT3 | Mitochondria | Deacetylase | SIRT3 regulates the metabolic transition between mitochondrial respiration and glycolysis in endothelial cells SIRT3 activation attenuates the damage caused by ROS through superoxide dismutase 2 and hypoxia-inducible factor-1 An increase in SIRT3 activity restores complex I activity and ATP levels in the mitochondrial electron transport chain |
| SIRT4 | Mitochondria | ADP-ribosyltransferase | SIRT4 regulates insulin secretion by inhibiting glutamate dehydrogenase activity in the mitochondrial matrix SIRT4 inhibits malonyl-CoA decarboxylase activity in mitochondria SIRT4 inhibits pyruvate dehydrogenase activity, which affects glycolysis and TCA cycle |
| SIRT5 | Mitochondria | Deacetylase | SIRT5 regulates glycolysis, Denucleated SIRT5 regulates the activity of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-COA synthetase 2 to regulate ketone body formation |
| SIRT6 | Nucleus | Deacetylase/ADP-ribosyltransferase | SIRT6 affects glucose metabolism by inhibiting the expression of HIF-1 SIRT6 acetylates PGC-1 SIRT6 negatively regulates triacylglycerol synthesis, thereby participating in lipid metabolism |
| SIRT7 | Nucleolus | Deacetylase | SIRT7 deacetylates the lysine on the (GABP) subunit |
Figure 3AMPK and mTOR signaling pathway. When energy is insufficient, AMPK can be activated to increase the intake of fatty acids and glucose, inhibit glycogen synthesis, promote fatty acid oxidation and increase energy production. At the same time, it can promote the synthesis of mitochondria by regulating PGC-α. AMPK activation, hypoxia conditions and insulin can also inhibit mTORC1 activation, so as to regulate fatty acid metabolism, protein synthesis, autophagy, etc. Insulin can also directly activate mTORC2, regulate cell survival and cytoskeleton formation.
Related mechanisms of polyphenols in HF treatment.
| Compound | Source | HF model | Dosage | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Resveratrol | Wine | Pressure-overload | 450 mg/kg/day, | Resveratrol increase exercise capacity of HF mice, increase skeletal muscle insulin sensitivity, and increase systemic glucose utilization and basal metabolic rate |
| Tesaglitazar induction | 100 mg/kg/day, | Resveratrol reduces cardiac dysfunction and corrects myocardial mitochondrial respiration by mediating SIRT1 activation in tesaglitazar-induced C57BL/6 mice and diabetic mice, but it has no effect on myocardium in SIRT1 deficient mice | ||
| Myocardial infarction | 200 mg/kg/day, | Resveratrol significantly increase ejection fraction and physical activity of myocardial infarction rats, restore myocardial fatty acid oxidation levels, significantly increases myocardial energy metabolism, and reduces left ventricular and atrial remodeling caused by myocardial infarction | ||
| Ischemia–reperfusion (I/R) injury | 50 mg/kg/day, | Inhibit stromal interaction molecule1 -induced intracellular Ca2+ accumulation, reduce the mortality of myocardial I/R injured mice, reduce the area of myocardial infarction, and improve cardiac function | ||
| Epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) | Green tea | Knockout manganese superoxide dismutase | 20 mg/kg/day, | EGCG reduces oxidative stress and free fatty acid levels. At the same time, it also delays the progression of HF by preventing the increased expression of nitric oxide synthase 2, nitrotyrosine, fatty acid synthase, Toll-like receptor 4 and SIRT1 |
| Pressure-overload | 50 mg/kg/day, | EGCG prevents left ventricular dilatation, increase ejection fraction and left ventricular short axis shortening rate, maintain cardiac function and upregulation of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA2a) | ||
| Pressure-overload | 10 mg/kg/day, | EGCG reverses changes in left ventricular diastolic diameter and systolic diameter of HF mice, increase ejection fraction; inhibits myocardial fibrosis; reduces oxidative stress, inflammation, and myocardial cell apoptosis; and reduces collagen I and III expression levels, thereby inhibiting myocardial fibrosis and reducing ventricular collagen remodeling, delaying the occurrence and progression of HF. It may work by inhibiting the transforming TGF- | ||
| Pressure-overload | 25,50 or 100 mg/kg/day, | EGCG can reduce the desensitization of | ||
| Puerarin | Puerariae Radix | Pressure-overload | 60 mg/kg/day, | Puerarin reduces the activity of lactate dehydrogenase and succinate dehydrogenase, increase the expression level of GLUT4, and reduces the expression level of CD36. It also reduces the levels of inflammatory factors in myocardial tissue and regulate PPAR |
| Myocardial infarction with diabetes | 100 mg/kg/day, | Puerarin increases AKT phosphorylation, decreases PPAR | ||
| Tanshinone IIA | Pressure-overload | 1.5 mg/kg/day, | Tanshinone IIA mediates the expression of related molecules by upregulating AMPK and downregulating mTOR to increase autophagy and inhibit apoptosis | |
| Pressure-overload | 20 mg/kg/day, | Tanshinone IIA reduce inflammatory response and cardiomyocyte apoptosis in HF rats by regulating serum B-type brain natriuretic peptide, interleukin 6 and C-reactive protein levels and myocardial B-cell lymphoma-2 associated X protein levels | ||
| 7,8-Dihydroxyflavone | / | Doxorubicin-induction | 5 mg/kg/day, | 7,8-Dihydroxyflavone increase cell viability |
| Isoquercetin | / | Lipopolysaccharide induction | 50 mg/kg/day, | Isoquercetin significantly reduces the inflammatory response and reduces the energy deficiency caused by lipopolysaccharide. It acts by increasing the expression of PGC1 |
| Naringenin | / | I/R injury | 50 mg/kg/day, | Naringenin reduces infarct size and myocardial cell index and reduces ischemia–reperfusion injury by inhibiting mitochondrial oxidative stress and increasing mitochondrial biogenesis through AMPK–SIRT3 signing |
Note: “/” means that its resource is rich.
Summary of known pathways, targets and metabolic pathways of drugs.
| Drug | Known pathway or target | Known metabolic pathway |
|---|---|---|
| Metformin | PI3k-PKB/AKT, AMPK, PGC-1 | Glucose metabolism, mitochondrial function, oxidative stress |
| Pioglitazone | PPAR | Fatty acid oxidation, mitochondrial function |
| SGLT2 inhibitors | AMPK, Na+/H+ exchanger-1, NLRP3 inflammatory corpuscle | Ketone metabolism, mitochondrial function, intracellular sodium homeostasis, insulin signaling, oxidative stress |
| Simvastatin | iNOSitol, INCX, Rac1 | Mitochondrial function, oxidative stress |
| Fenofibrate | PPAR | Fatty acid metabolism |
| Trimetazidine | Long-chain mitochondrial 3-ketoacyl CoA thiolase | Glucose metabolism, fatty acid metabolism |
| Carvedilol | Fatty acid metabolism, mitochondrial function | |
| Resveratrol | SIRT1, CYP1B2, stromal interaction molecule1 | Glucose metabolism, fatty acid metabolism, mitochondrial function, insulin signal, Ca2+ concentration |
| EGCG | TGF- | Fatty acid metabolism, oxidative stress, cell function |
| Puerarin | GLU4, CD36, PPAR | Glucose metabolism, fatty acid metabolism |
| Tanshinone IIA | AMPK, mTOR | Apoptosis |
| 7,8-Dihydroxyflavone | AMPK, STAT3 | Mitochondrial function |
| Isoquercetin | PGC1 | Fatty acid metabolism |
| Naringenin | AMPK-SIRT3 | Mitochondrial function |
| Ginsenoside Rb1 | TGF- | Glucose metabolism |
| Ginsenoside Rb3 | PPAR | Fatty acid metabolism, mitochondrial function |
| Arjunolic acid | P47phox, ERK, PPAR | Glucose metabolism, mitochondrial function, oxidative stress |
| Astragaloside IV | PPAR | Fatty acid metabolism, mitochondrial function |
| AST, LDH, CK, CK-MB, ATPase | Mitochondrial function | |
| Mitochondrial biological gene regulatory factors | Fatty acid metabolism, mitochondrial function | |
| TNF- | Fatty acid metabolism | |
| Higenamine | PPAR | Mitochondrial function |
| Tetramethylpyrazine | Mitochondrial function | |
| Thyroxine | LKB1/AMPK/mTOR | Fatty acid metabolism |
| Salsolinol | – | Mitochondrial function |
| Relaxin | – | Fatty acid synthesis, amino acid metabolism |
| Estrogen | – | Mitochondrial function |
–Unclear.