| Literature DB >> 34899373 |
Daniel Finke1,2,3, Markus B Heckmann1,2,3, Norbert Frey2,3, Lorenz H Lehmann1,2,3,4.
Abstract
Cardiovascular diseases have multifactorial causes. Classical cardiovascular risk factors, such as arterial hypertension, smoking, hyperlipidemia, and diabetes associate with the development of vascular stenoses and coronary heart disease. Further comorbidities and its impact on cardiovascular metabolism have gotten more attention recently. Thus, also cancer biology may affect the heart, apart from cardiotoxic side effects of chemotherapies. Cancer is a systemic disease which primarily leads to metabolic alterations within the tumor. An emerging number of preclinical and clinical studies focuses on the interaction between cancer and a maladaptive crosstalk to the heart. Cachexia and sarcopenia can have dramatic consequences for many organ functions, including cardiac wasting and heart failure. These complications significantly increase mortality and morbidity of heart failure and cancer patients. There are concurrent metabolic changes in fatty acid oxidation (FAO) and glucose utilization in heart failure as well as in cancer, involving central molecular regulators, such as PGC-1α. Further, specific inflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α, INF-β), non-inflammatory cytokines (myostatin, SerpinA3, Ataxin-10) and circulating metabolites (D2-HG) may mediate a direct and maladaptive crosstalk of both diseases. Additionally, cancer therapies, such as anthracyclines and angiogenesis inhibitors target common metabolic mechanisms in cardiomyocytes and malignant cells. This review focuses on cardiovascular, cancerous, and cancer therapy-associated alterations on the systemic and cardiac metabolic state.Entities:
Keywords: cancer metabolism; cardiac metabolism; cardio-oncology; cytokines; heart failure; inflammation; metabolic shift; second messenger
Year: 2021 PMID: 34899373 PMCID: PMC8662519 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2021.729713
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Preclinical models that describe metabolic alterations in heart disease, cancer, and link both diseases (interdisciplinary studies).
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |||||
| IFN-γ | Cachexia | Anti-IFN-γ antibodies |
| ||
| IL-6 | Cachexia | IL-6 KO animals |
| ||
| Cachexia | Anti-IL-6 antibodies |
| |||
| Muscular atrophy | IL-6 transgenic mice |
| |||
| Muscular atrophy | IL-6 injections |
| |||
| TNF-α | Cachexia | Injection of TNF-α -producing CHO cells |
| ||
| Cachexia | Pharmacological inhibition of TNF-α |
| |||
| IL-1β | Cachexia | Injection of IL1-receptor antagonists |
| ||
|
| Cachexia and loss of heart mass | Blockage of Activin ActRIIB pathway in C26 tumor-bearing mice |
| ||
|
| |||||
| Myostatin | Muscle wasting | Cardiomyocyte-specific deletion of Myostatin and use of a myostatin blocking antibody |
| ||
| SerpinA3 | Tumor growth | MI/HTx in APCmin mice |
| ||
|
| |||||
| Ataxin-10 | Cardiac atrophy | Tumor cell (MC38, C26, SW480) injection in mice, APC delta 580 mice |
| ||
| Insulin depletion | Cardiac wasting | Insulin supplementation |
| ||
|
| |||||
| miR-145 | Cardiac fibrosis | miR-145 KO mice |
| ||
| Tumor growth | miR/miR inhibitor transfection |
| |||
| miR transfection |
| ||||
| miR-1 | Elevated in MI after LAD ligation | LAD ligation |
| ||
| Tumor growth suppression | miR transfection |
| |||
| miR-133a/b | Elevated in MI after LAD ligation | LAD ligation |
| ||
| Heart malformations/DCM | miR-133a-1/2 dKO mice |
| |||
| Tumor growth suppression | miR transfection |
| |||
| miR-208a | AV blockage/cardiac hypertrophy | mR-208a Tg/KO mice |
| ||
| Oncogene/Tumor proliferation | miR overexpression/miR siRNA |
| |||
|
| |||||
| Akt | Heart failure and mitochondrial dysfunction | Akt transgenic mice, constative active and inducible |
| ||
| Enhanced glucose metabolism, GLUT-1 expression | Inducible Akt-transgenic mouse hepatoma cells |
| |||
| HK activity, HK-mitochondria interaction | Akt-1 KO, Akt-1/2 dKO |
| |||
| PGC-1α | Heart failure | PGC-1α KO mice |
| ||
| PPCM | PGC-1α KO mice |
| |||
| Apoptosis | Pancreatic Cancer Stem Cells/Metformin/MYC expression |
| |||
| Glycolytic flux and poor prognosis in breast cancer | Breast cancer cell lines/siRNA treatment |
| |||
| O-GlcNAc | Cardiac Hypertrophy | Db/db mice |
| ||
| Heart failure | Db/db mice, STZ injections, HDAC4 KO mice |
| |||
| Transient CMP | HDAC4 KO mice, STIM1/2 dKO mice |
| |||
| Glycolytic flux/apoptosis | Breast cancer cell line/OGT-shRNA transfections |
| |||
| Pancreas duct epithelial cells/OGT-shRNA transfections |
| ||||
| Tumor growth | Xenograft models with shOGT |
| |||
|
| |||||
| D2-HG | Alterations in cardiac glucose utilization and epigenetic repression | IDH2R140Q-mutant mice |
| ||
| Cardiotoxicity | AML patients with IDH1/2, iPS derived cardiomyocytes |
| |||
ActRIIB, Activin type 2 receptor; APC, Adenomatosis polyposis coli; AV, Atrioventricular; CHD, Coronary heart disease; CMP, Cardiomyopathy; CHO-cells, Chinese Hamster Ovarian cells; D2-HG, D-2-Hydroxyglutarate; DCM, Dilatative cardiomyopathy; dKO, Double Knockout; GLUT-1, Glucose transporter 1; HTx, Heart transplantation; HK, Hexokinase; HDAC4, Histon deacetylase 4; IFN-γ, Interferon-gamma; IL, Interleukin; IDH2, Isocitrate dehydrogenase 2; KO, Knockout; LAD, Left anterior descending coronary artery; Db/Db, Leptin receptor-deficient mouse line; miR, MicroRNA; Min, Multiple intestinal neoplasia; MI, Myocardial infarction; O-GlcNAc, O-Linked N-Acetylglucosamine; PPCM, Peripartum cardiomyopathy; PGC-1α, Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator; OGT, Protein O-GlcNAc Transferase; Akt, Protein kinase B; shRNA, small hairpin RNA; siRNA, Small interfering RNA; STZ, Streptozotocin; STIM1/2, Stromal interaction molecule 1/2; TNF-α, Tumor necrosis factor alpha; Tg, Transgene; TGF-β, Tumor growth factor beta.
Regulation of metabolic genes in failing cardiomyocytes and cancer cells.
|
|
|
|
| Akt | • Akt is upregulated in the heart due to pressure-overload ( | • Akt pathway activation is leading to cell growth ( |
| PGC-1α | • Downregulation in heart failure ( | • Upregulation in breast cancer increases glutamine flux and glycolysis rates ( |
| OGT/OGA (O-GlcNAc) | • Increased O-GlcNAc is protective in the diabetic heart ( | • Decreased O-GlcNAc induces apoptosis and reduces growth of breast cancer and pancreatic tumors ( |
| PFK | • Inhibition deteriorates heart function during pressure-overload ( | • Upregulation in cancer and maintenance of a high glycolytic flux, e.g., in leukemia cells ( |
FAO, Fatty acid oxidation; GLUT-1, Glucose transporter 1; HK, Hexokinase; PFK, Phosphofructokinase; PGC-1α, Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator; Akt, Protein kinase B; O-GlcNAc, O-Linked N-Acetylglucosamine; OGT, Protein O-GlcNAc Transferase; OGA, protein O-GlcNAcase; TopoIIβ, Topoisomerase IIβ; VEGF, Vascular endothelial growth factor.
Cancer therapies which influence cardiac metabolism.
|
|
|
|
| VEGF inhibitors, e.g., Bevacizumab and tyrosine kinase inhibitors | GLUT-1 ( | • Arterial hypertension ( |
| Anthracyclines, e.g., doxorubicin | TopoIIβ ( | • Increased apoptosis ( |
FAO, Fatty acid oxidation; GLUT-1, Glucose transporter 1; IL, Interleukin; PGC-1α, Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator; Akt, Protein kinase B; TopoIIβ, Topoisomerase IIβ; VEGF, Vascular endothelial growth factor.
FIGURE 1Scheme of interacting factors between heart failure (HF), coronary heart disease (CHD), cancer growth, and muscle atrophy. Cytokine release from the tumor (Ataxin-10, D2-HG, IL-1/6, TNF-α, and INF-γ) may influence cardiac function and muscle wasting. Released factors from the heart, such as Myostatin and SerpinA3 are able to regulate muscular and cancer growth. Alterations in microRNAs (miRs) and metabolic pathways, including the hexosamine biosynthesis pathways (HBPs), PGC-1α and Akt activation are regulating cardiac remodeling as well as tumor growth. The adaptations in metabolic signaling pathways may be influenced by chemotherapies, e.g., by VEGF inhibitors and doxorubicin. D2-HG, D-2-hydroxyglurate; INF-γ, Interferon-gamma; IL, Interleukin; PGC-1α, Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator; Akt, Protein kinase B; TNF-α, Tumor necrosis factor alpha; VEGF, Vascular endothelial growth factor. Created with Biorender.com.