AI Article Synopsis

  • * In studies, both human heart tissue and mice showed that alternate-day fasting led to increased levels of a protein called TFEB, which regulates autophagy and is linked to cardiac function.
  • * Findings indicate that while TFEB can boost cardiac responses, its overexpression alongside doxorubicin worsens heart failure, highlighting that fasting and the TFEB/GDF15 pathway could intensify the drug's harmful effects on the heart.

Article Abstract

Fasting strategies are under active clinical investigation in patients receiving chemotherapy. Prior murine studies suggest that alternate-day fasting may attenuate doxorubicin cardiotoxicity and stimulate nuclear translocation of transcription factor EB (TFEB), a master regulator of autophagy and lysosomal biogenesis. In this study, human heart tissue from patients with doxorubicin-induced heart failure demonstrated increased nuclear TFEB protein. In mice treated with doxorubicin, alternate-day fasting or viral TFEB transduction increased mortality and impaired cardiac function. Mice randomized to alternate-day fasting plus doxorubicin exhibited increased TFEB nuclear translocation in the myocardium. When combined with doxorubicin, cardiomyocyte-specific TFEB overexpression provoked cardiac remodeling, while systemic TFEB overexpression increased growth differentiation factor 15 (GDF15) and caused heart failure and death. Cardiomyocyte TFEB knockout attenuated doxorubicin cardiotoxicity, while recombinant GDF15 was sufficient to cause cardiac atrophy. Our studies identify that both sustained alternate-day fasting and a TFEB/GDF15 pathway exacerbate doxorubicin cardiotoxicity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10257771PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cmet.2023.02.006DOI Listing

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