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Skeletal muscle alterations in tachycardia-induced heart failure are linked to deficient natriuretic peptide signalling and are attenuated by RAS-/NEP-inhibition.
- Source :
-
PloS one [PLoS One] 2019 Dec 04; Vol. 14 (12), pp. e0225937. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Dec 04 (Print Publication: 2019). - Publication Year :
- 2019
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Abstract
- Background: Heart failure induced cachexia is highly prevalent. Insights into disease progression are lacking.<br />Methods: Early state of left ventricular dysfunction (ELVD) and symptomatic systolic heart failure (HF) were both induced in rabbits by tachypacing. Tissue of limb muscle (LM) was subjected to histologic assessment. For unbiased characterisation of early and late myopathy, a proteomic approach followed by computational pathway-analyses was performed and combined with pathway-focused gene expression analyses. Specimen of thoracic diaphragm (TD) served as control for inactivity-induced skeletal muscle alterations. In a subsequent study, inhibition of the renin-angiotensin-system and neprilysin (RAS-/NEP) was compared to placebo.<br />Results: HF was accompanied by loss of protein content (8.7±0.4% vs. 7.0±0.5%, mean±SEM, control vs. HF, p<0.01) and a slow-to-fast fibre type switch, establishing hallmarks of cachexia. In ELVD, the enzymatic set-up of LM and TD shifted to a catabolic state. A disturbed malate-aspartate shuttle went well with increased enzymes of glycolysis, forming the enzymatic basis for enforced anoxic energy regeneration. The histological findings and the pathway analysis of metabolic results drew the picture of suppressed PGC-1α signalling, linked to the natriuretic peptide system. In HF, natriuretic peptide signalling was desensitised, as confirmed by an increase in the ratio of serum BNP to tissue cGMP (57.0±18.6pg/ml/nM/ml vs. 165.8±16.76pg/ml/nM/ml, p<0.05) and a reduced expression of natriuretic peptide receptor-A. In HF, combined RAS-/NEP-inhibition prevented from loss in protein content (8.7±0.3% vs. 6.0±0.6% vs. 8.3±0.9%, Baseline vs. HF-Placebo vs. HF-RAS/NEP, p<0.05 Baseline vs. HF-Placebo, p = 0.7 Baseline vs. HF-RAS/NEP).<br />Conclusions: Tachypacing-induced heart failure entails a generalised myopathy, preceding systolic dysfunction. The characterisation of "pre-cachectic" state and its progression is feasible. Early enzymatic alterations of LM depict a catabolic state, rendering LM prone to futile substrate metabolism. A combined RAS-/NEP-inhibition ameliorates cardiac-induced myopathy independent of systolic function, which could be linked to stabilised natriuretic peptide/cGMP/PGC-1α signalling.<br />Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Subjects :
- Animals
Biological Transport
Biomarkers
Disease Models, Animal
Echocardiography
Gene Expression Profiling methods
Heart Failure diagnosis
Mitochondria, Muscle genetics
Mitochondria, Muscle metabolism
Muscle, Skeletal pathology
Muscle, Skeletal ultrastructure
Natriuretic Peptides genetics
Proteomics methods
Rabbits
Tachycardia diagnosis
ras Proteins metabolism
Heart Failure etiology
Heart Failure metabolism
Muscle, Skeletal metabolism
Natriuretic Peptides metabolism
Signal Transduction
Tachycardia complications
ras Proteins antagonists & inhibitors
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1932-6203
- Volume :
- 14
- Issue :
- 12
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- PloS one
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 31800630
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0225937