AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the link between the cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) and heart failure in diabetic patients, aiming to understand how increasing BH4 levels can counteract left ventricular dysfunction.
  • Despite normal levels of BH4 and NOS activity in the hearts of diabetic models, BH4 supplementation and genetic modifications improved cardiac function by enhancing glucose uptake through specific transporters.
  • The research highlights the importance of neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) and its role in the protective effects of BH4 on cardiac function and energy metabolism in the context of diabetes.

Article Abstract

Rationale: In diabetic patients, heart failure with predominant left ventricular (LV) diastolic dysfunction is a common complication for which there is no effective treatment. Oxidation of the NOS (nitric oxide synthase) cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) and dysfunctional NOS activity have been implicated in the pathogenesis of the diabetic vascular and cardiomyopathic phenotype.

Objective: Using mice models and human myocardial samples, we evaluated whether and by which mechanism increasing myocardial BH4 availability prevented or reversed LV dysfunction induced by diabetes.

Methods And Results: In contrast to the vascular endothelium, BH4 levels, superoxide production, and NOS activity (by liquid chromatography) did not differ in the LV myocardium of diabetic mice or in atrial tissue from diabetic patients. Nevertheless, the impairment in both cardiomyocyte relaxation and [Ca]i (intracellular calcium) decay and in vivo LV function (echocardiography and tissue Doppler) that developed in wild-type mice 12 weeks post-diabetes induction (streptozotocin, 42-45 mg/kg) was prevented in mGCH1-Tg (mice with elevated myocardial BH4 content secondary to trangenic overexpression of GTP-cyclohydrolase 1) and reversed in wild-type mice receiving oral BH4 supplementation from the 12th to the 18th week after diabetes induction. The protective effect of BH4 was abolished by CRISPR/Cas9-mediated knockout of nNOS (the neuronal NOS isoform) in mGCH1-Tg. In HEK (human embryonic kidney) cells, S-nitrosoglutathione led to a PKG (protein kinase G)-dependent increase in plasmalemmal density of the insulin-independent glucose transporter GLUT-1 (glucose transporter-1). In cardiomyocytes, mGCH1 overexpression induced a NO/sGC (soluble guanylate cyclase)/PKG-dependent increase in glucose uptake via GLUT-1, which was instrumental in preserving mitochondrial creatine kinase activity, oxygen consumption rate, LV energetics (by phosphorous magnetic resonance spectroscopy), and myocardial function.

Conclusions: We uncovered a novel mechanism whereby myocardial BH4 prevents and reverses LV diastolic and systolic dysfunction associated with diabetes via an nNOS-mediated increase in insulin-independent myocardial glucose uptake and utilization. These findings highlight the potential of GCH1/BH4-based therapeutics in human diabetic cardiomyopathy. Graphic Abstract: A graphic abstract is available for this article.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7612785PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.120.316656DOI Listing

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