| Literature DB >> 34267663 |
M Annandale1, L J Daniels1,2, X Li1, J P H Neale1, A H L Chau3, H A Ambalawanar1, S L James1, P Koutsifeli1, L M D Delbridge3, K M Mellor1,3.
Abstract
Cardiovascular disease is one of the leading causes of mortality in diabetes. High fructose consumption has been linked with the development of diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Serum and cardiac tissue fructose levels are elevated in diabetic patients, and cardiac production of fructose via the intracellular polyol pathway is upregulated. The question of whether direct myocardial fructose exposure and upregulated fructose metabolism have potential to induce cardiac fructose toxicity in metabolic stress settings arises. Unlike tightly-regulated glucose metabolism, fructose bypasses the rate-limiting glycolytic enzyme, phosphofructokinase, and proceeds through glycolysis in an unregulated manner. In vivo rodent studies have shown that high dietary fructose induces cardiac metabolic stress and functional disturbance. In vitro, studies have demonstrated that cardiomyocytes cultured in high fructose exhibit lipid accumulation, inflammation, hypertrophy and low viability. Intracellular fructose mediates post-translational modification of proteins, and this activity provides an important mechanistic pathway for fructose-related cardiomyocyte signaling and functional effect. Additionally, fructose has been shown to provide a fuel source for the stressed myocardium. Elucidating the mechanisms of fructose toxicity in the heart may have important implications for understanding cardiac pathology in metabolic stress settings.Entities:
Keywords: advanced glycation end – products; carbohydrate metabolism; cardiac lipogenesis; diabetic cardiomyopathy (DCM); fructolysis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34267663 PMCID: PMC8277231 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2021.695486
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
FIGURE 1Cardiomyocyte fructose metabolism. Fructose is phosphorylated by fructokinase (FK) to fructose 1-phosphate (F1P), and metabolized to triose phosphates, dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP) and glyceraldehyde (GA). The polyol pathway (black) converts glucose to sorbitol via aldose reductase (AR), and sorbitol to glucose via sorbitol dehydrogenase (SDH). DHAP and GA are converted to glyceraldehyde 3-phosphates (GA3P) and provide substrates for glycolysis to produce acetyl-CoA to enter the mitochondrial TCA cycle. DHAP and TCA cycle-derived citrate contribute to lipid biosynthesis. HKII, hexokinase 2; PFK, phosphofructokinase; TCA, tricarboxylic acid. Created using biorender.com. Adapted from Daniels et al., 2021.
Fructose-induced cardiomyocyte pathology.
| Cell type | Fructose concentration | Treatment duration (hr) | Cardiomyocyte pathology | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| H9c2 | 1 mM | 24 | ↑ Inflammation |
|
| ↑ Fat storage | ||||
| AMC | 2 mM | 24 | ↑ Inflammation |
|
| ↑ ROS production | ||||
| ↑ NF-κB signaling | ||||
| ↑ p38 MAPK signaling | ||||
| NRVM | 25 mM | 48 | ↑ Hypertrophy |
|
| ↑ Mitochondrial-derived ROS | ||||
| H9c2 | 5 μM | 24 | ↑ Inflammation |
|
| ↑ Collagen | ||||
| ↑ NF-κB signaling | ||||
| H9c2 and HL-1 | 5 mM | 24 | ↑ Inflammation |
|
| ↑ NF-κB signaling | ||||
| H9c2 | 5 mM | 24 | ↓ Cell viability |
|
| ↑ Inflammation | ||||
| ↓ Antioxidant levels | ||||
| ↓ AMPK activity | ||||
| ↑ NF-κB signaling | ||||
| H9c2 | 50 mM | 24 | ↑ Hypertrophy |
|
| ↓ Mitochondrial respiration | ||||
| ↑ Mitochondrial-derived ROS | ||||
| ↑ Apoptosis | ||||
| ↓ AMPK activity | ||||
| AMC | 5 mM | 24 | ↑ Fat storage and synthesis |
|
| ↑ Lipid oxidation | ||||
| ↑ ROS production | ||||
| ↑ Inflammation | ||||
| ↑ NF-κB signaling | ||||
| NRVM and H9c2 | 1 mM | 24 | ↑ Fat storage |
|
Rat cardiomyoblast cell line (H9c2), mouse atrial cell line (HL-1), adult mouse cardiomyocyte (AMC), neonatal rat ventricular myocyte (NRVM), reactive oxygen species (ROS), nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells (NF-κB), mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK).