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Cardiovascular Research Advance Access first published online on January 15, 2009
This version [Corrected Proof] published online on February 4, 2009

Cardiovascular Research, doi:10.1093/cvr/cvp017
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Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. © The Author 2009. For permissions please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org.

Mechanisms for increased myocardial fatty acid utilization following short-term high-fat feeding

Jordan J. Wright1,{dagger}, Jaetaek Kim1,2,{dagger}, Jonathan Buchanan1, Sihem Boudina1, Sandra Sena1, Kyriaki Bakirtzi3, Olesya Ilkun1, Heather A. Theobald1, Robert C. Cooksey1, Kostantin V. Kandror3 and E. Dale Abel1,*

1 Division of Endocrinology, Metabolism and Diabetes and Program in Molecular Medicine, University of Utah School of Medicine, 15 N 2030 East, Bldg 533, Rm 3110B, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA
2 Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Department of Internal Medicine, College of Medicine, Chung-Ang University, Seoul, Korea
3 Department of Biochemistry, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA 02118, USA

* Corresponding author. Tel: +1 801 585 0727; fax: +1 801 585 0701. E-mail address: dale.abel{at}hmbg.utah.edu

Aims: Diet-induced obesity is associated with increased myocardial fatty acid (FA) utilization, insulin resistance, and cardiac dysfunction. The study was designed to test the hypothesis that impaired glucose utilization accounts for initial changes in FA metabolism.

Methods and results: Ten-week-old C57BL6J mice were fed a high-fat diet (HFD, 45% calories from fat) or normal chow (4% calories from fat). Cardiac function and substrate metabolism in isolated working hearts, glucose uptake in isolated cardiomyocytes, mitochondrial function, insulin-stimulated protein kinase B (Akt/PKB) and Akt substrate (AS-160) phosphorylation, glucose transporter 4 (GLUT4) translocation, pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) activity, and mRNA levels for metabolic genes were determined after 2 or 5 weeks of HFD. Two weeks of HFD reduced basal rates of glycolysis and glucose oxidation and prevented insulin stimulation of glycolysis in hearts and reduced insulin-stimulated glucose uptake in cardiomyocytes. Insulin-stimulated Akt/PKB and AS-160 phosphorylation were preserved, and PDH activity was unchanged. GLUT4 content was reduced by 55% and GLUT4 translocation was significantly attenuated. HFD increased FA oxidation rates and myocardial oxygen consumption (MVO2), which could not be accounted for by mitochondrial uncoupling or by increased expression of peroxisome proliferator activated receptor-{alpha} (PPAR-{alpha}) target genes, which increased only after 5 weeks of HFD.

Conclusion: Rates of myocardial glucose utilization are altered early in the course of HFD because of reduced GLUT4 content and GLUT4 translocation despite normal insulin signalling to Akt/PKB and AS-160. The reciprocal increase in FA utilization is not due to PPAR-{alpha}-mediated signalling or mitochondrial uncoupling. Thus, the initial increase in myocardial FA utilization in response to HFD likely results from impaired glucose transport that precedes impaired insulin signalling.

KEYWORDS Glucose transport; Glycolysis; Fatty acid metabolism; Insulin resistance; Mitochondria


Time for primary review: 22 days

{dagger} These authors contributed equally.


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