AI Article Synopsis

  • A fructose-rich diet increases triglyceride production in the liver and has negative effects on heart health, while estrogens generally promote better lipid metabolism and protect the heart.
  • In an experiment with ovariectomized female rats, researchers examined the combined impact of a fructose-rich diet and estrogen (E2) replacement on various metabolic parameters, including feeding behavior, plasma lipids, and cardiac fatty acid transporters.
  • The results revealed that while estrogen mitigates some harmful effects of fructose, it can also amplify the negative impact on heart lipid metabolism by increasing a heart fatty acid transporter (CD36) and promoting triglyceride accumulation, raising concerns for clinical estrogen use in women with type 2 diabetes.

Article Abstract

Fructose rich diet increases hepatic triglycerides production and has deleterious cardiac effects. Estrogens are involved in regulation of lipid metabolism as well, but their effects are cardio beneficial. In order to study effects of fructose rich diet on the main heart fatty acid transporter CD36 and the role of estrogens, we subjected ovariectomized female rats to the standard diet or fructose rich diet, with or without estradiol (E2) replacement. The following parameters were analyzed: feeding behavior, visceral adipose tissue mass, plasma lipids, cardiac CD36 expression, localization and insulin regulation, as well as the profile of cardiac lipids. Results show that fructose rich diet significantly increased plasma triglycerides and decreased plasma free fatty acid (FFA) concentration, while E2 additionally emphasized FFA decrease. The fructose diet increased cardiac plasma membrane content of CD36 in the basal and insulin-stimulated states, and decreased its low density microsomes content. The E2 in fructose-fed rats raised the total cardiac protein content of CD36, its presence in plasma membranes and low density microsomes, and cardiac deposition of triglycerides, as well. Although E2 counteracts fructose in some aspects of lipid metabolism, and separately they have opposite cardiac effects, in combination with fructose rich diet, E2 additionally enhances CD36 presence in plasma membranes of cardiac cells and triglycerides accumulation, which paradoxically might promote deleterious effects of fructose diet on cardiac lipid metabolism. Taken together, the results presented in this work are of high importance for clinical administration of estrogens in females with a history of type 2 diabetes.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejphar.2012.08.007DOI Listing

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