Obesity improves myocardial ischaemic tolerance and RISK signalling in insulin-insensitive rats.

Dis Model Mech

Heart Foundation Research Centre, Griffith Health Institute, Griffith University Gold Coast, QLD 4217, Australia.

Published: March 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Rodent studies involving insulin-insensitive rats showed that those on a high-carbohydrate diet (OB) had better resistance to ischemia-reperfusion (I-R) injury compared to those on a control diet (CD), despite being heavier and insulin-resistant.
  • Dietary obesity led to increased expression and phosphorylation of pro-survival signaling proteins, indicating a paradox where obesity enhances myocardial I-R tolerance despite the associated risks.

Article Abstract

Obesity with associated metabolic disturbances worsens ischaemic heart disease outcomes, and rodent studies confirm that obesity with insulin-resistance impairs myocardial resistance to ischemia-reperfusion (I-R) injury. However, the effects of obesity per se are unclear, with some evidence for paradoxic cardioprotection (particularly in older subjects). We tested the impact of dietary obesity on I-R tolerance and reperfusion injury salvage kinase (RISK) signalling in hearts from middle-aged (10 months old) insulin-insensitive rats. Hearts from Wistar rats on either a 32-week control (CD) or high carbohydrate obesogenic (OB) diet were assessed for I-R resistance in vivo (45 minutes left anterior descending artery occlusion and 120 minutes reperfusion) and ex vivo (25 minutes ischemia and 60 minutes reperfusion). Expression and δ-opioid receptor (δ-OR) phospho-regulation of pro-survival (Akt/PKB, Erk1/2, eNOS) and pro-injury (GSK3β) enzymes were also examined. OB rats were heavier (764 ± 25 versus 657 ± 22 g for CD; P<0.05), hyperleptinaemic (11.1 ± 0.7 versus 5.0 ± 0.7 for CD; P<0.01) and comparably insulin-insensitive (HOMA-IR of 63.2 ± 3.3 versus 63.2 ± 1.6 for CD). In vivo infarction was more than halved in OB (20 ± 3%) versus CD rats (45 ± 6% P<0.05), as was post-ischaemic lactate dehydrogenase efflux (0.4 ± 0.3 mU/ml versus 5.6 ± 0.5 mU/ml; P<0.02) and ex vivo contractile dysfunction (62 ± 2% versus 44 ± 6% recovery of ventricular force; P<0.05). OB hearts exhibited up to 60% higher Akt expression, with increased phosphorylation of eNOS (+100%), GSK3β (+45%) and Erk1/2 (+15%). Pre-ischaemic δ-OR agonism with BW373U86 improved recoveries in CD hearts in association with phosphorylation of Akt (+40%), eNOS (+75%) and GSK3β (+30%), yet failed to further enhance RISK-NOS activation or I-R outcomes in OB hearts. In summary, dietary obesity in the context of age-related insulin-insensitivity paradoxically improves myocardial I-R tolerance, in association with moderate hyperleptinaemic and enhanced RISK expression and phospho-regulation. However, OB hearts are resistant to further RISK modulation and cardioprotection via acute δ-OR agonism.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3597027PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/dmm.010959DOI Listing

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