Publications by authors named "Andries J Gilde"

Cardiac hypertrophy and failure are associated with alterations in cardiac substrate metabolism. It remains to be established, however, whether genomically driven changes in cardiac glucose and fatty acid (FA) metabolism represent a key event of the hypertrophic remodeling process. Accordingly, we investigated metabolic gene expression and substrate metabolism during compensatory hypertrophy, in relation to other cardiac remodeling processes.

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It has been postulated that the failing heart suffers from chronic energy starvation, and that derangements in cardiac energy conversion are accessory to the progressive nature of this disease. The molecular mechanisms driving this 'metabolic remodelling' process and their significance for the development of cardiac failure are still open to discussion. Next to changes in mitochondrial function, the hypertrophied heart is characterized by a marked shift in substrate preference away from fatty acids towards glucose.

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Long-chain fatty acids (FA) coordinately induce the expression of a panel of genes involved in cellular FA metabolism in cardiac muscle cells, thereby promoting their own metabolism. These effects are likely to be mediated by peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs). Whereas the significance of PPARalpha in FA-mediated expression has been demonstrated, the role of the PPARbeta/delta and PPARgamma isoforms in cardiac lipid metabolism is unknown.

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The peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs) are members of the nuclear hormone receptor superfamily. Since their discovery in the beginning of the nineties the three isoforms (PPARalpha, beta/delta and gamma, encoded by different genes) have been implicated in the regulation of almost every single aspect of lipid metabolism and, consequently, in diseases that involve disturbances in lipid metabolism (obesity, diabetes, atherosclerosis, cardiac failure). Although their prominent role in these processes has hardly been disputed, the way in which the activity of these transcription factors is regulated under physiological and pathological conditions awaits further clarification.

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Purpose: previous studies have shown that the rat small intestinal cell line IEC-18 provides a size-selective barrier for paracellularly transported hydrophilic macromolecules. In order to determine the utility of IEC-18 cells as an in vitro model to screen the passive paracellular and transcellular components of the intestinal transport of nutrients and drugs, we have now examined the transport of GlySar (H(+)-coupled di/tripeptide carrier), O-methyl-d-glucose (glucose carrier), vincristine and rhodamine 123 (P-glycoprotein), and calcein and DNPSG (MRPs) and the bidirectional transport of paracellularly transported compounds. Transport of these compounds across the filter grown IEC-18 cells was compared with transport across the human colon carcinoma Caco-2 cells.

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