Targeting fatty acid and carbohydrate oxidation--a novel therapeutic intervention in the ischemic and failing heart.

Jagdip S Jaswal, Wendy Keung, Wei Wang, John R Ussher, Gary D Lopaschuk

Mazankowski Alberta Heart Institute, Departments of Pediatrics and Pharmacology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

Journal Article: Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (impact factor: 4.66). 01/2011; 1813(7):1333-50. DOI: 10.1016/j.bbamcr.2011.01.015

Abstract

Cardiac ischemia and its consequences including heart failure, which itself has emerged as the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in developed countries are accompanied by complex alterations in myocardial energy substrate metabolism. In contrast to the normal heart, where fatty acid and glucose metabolism are tightly regulated, the dynamic relationship between fatty acid β-oxidation and glucose oxidation is perturbed in ischemic and ischemic-reperfused hearts, as well as in the failing heart. These metabolic alterations negatively impact both cardiac efficiency and function. Specifically there is an increased reliance on glycolysis during ischemia and fatty acid β-oxidation during reperfusion following ischemia as sources of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production. Depending on the severity of heart failure, the contribution of overall myocardial oxidative metabolism (fatty acid β-oxidation and glucose oxidation) to adenosine triphosphate production can be depressed, while that of glycolysis can be increased. Nonetheless, the balance between fatty acid β-oxidation and glucose oxidation is amenable to pharmacological intervention at multiple levels of each metabolic pathway. This review will focus on the pathways of cardiac fatty acid and glucose metabolism, and the metabolic phenotypes of ischemic and ischemic/reperfused hearts, as well as the metabolic phenotype of the failing heart. Furthermore, as energy substrate metabolism has emerged as a novel therapeutic intervention in these cardiac pathologies, this review will describe the mechanistic bases and rationale for the use of pharmacological agents that modify energy substrate metabolism to improve cardiac function in the ischemic and failing heart. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Mitochondria and Cardioprotection.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

cardiac fatty acid
 
cardiac function
 
dynamic relationship
 
energy substrate metabolism
 
failing heart
 
fatty acid
 
fatty acid β-oxidation
 
glucose metabolism
 
increased reliance
 
ischemic-reperfused hearts
 
ischemic/reperfused hearts
 
leading cause
 
mechanistic bases
 
metabolic pathway
 
metabolic phenotype
 
modify energy substrate metabolism
 
myocardial energy substrate metabolism
 
myocardial oxidative metabolism
 
normal heart
 
pharmacological agents