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Caffeic acid ethanolamide prevents cardiac dysfunction through sirtuin dependent cardiac bioenergetics preservation.

Authors :
Lee SY
Ku HC
Kuo YH
Yang KC
Tu PC
Chiu HL
Su MJ
Source :
Journal of biomedical science [J Biomed Sci] 2015 Sep 22; Vol. 22, pp. 80. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Sep 22.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Background: Cardiac oxidative stress, bioenergetics and catecholamine play major roles in heart failure progression. However, the relationships between these three dominant heart failure factors are not fully elucidated. Caffeic acid ethanolamide (CAEA), a synthesized derivative from caffeic acid that exerted antioxidative properties, was thus applied in this study to explore its effects on the pathogenesis of heart failure.<br />Results: In vitro studies in HL-1 cells exposed to isoproterenol showed an increase in cellular and mitochondria oxidative stress. Two-week isoproterenol injections into mice resulted in ventricular hypertrophy, myocardial fibrosis, elevated lipid peroxidation, cardiac adenosine triphosphate and left ventricular ejection fraction decline, suggesting oxidative stress and bioenergetics changes in catecholamine-induced heart failure. CAEA restored oxygen consumption rates and adenosine triphosphate contents. In addition, CAEA alleviated isoproterenol-induced cardiac remodeling, cardiac oxidative stress, cardiac bioenergetics and function insufficiency in mice. CAEA treatment recovered sirtuin 1 and sirtuin 3 activity, and attenuated the changes of proteins, including manganese superoxide dismutase and hypoxia-inducible factor 1-α, which are the most likely mechanisms responsible for the alleviation of isoproterenol-caused cardiac injury<br />Conclusion: CAEA prevents catecholamine-induced cardiac damage and is therefore a possible new therapeutic approach for preventing heart failure progression.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1423-0127
Volume :
22
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of biomedical science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26391855
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12929-015-0188-1