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Glucocorticoid chronopharmacology promotes glucose metabolism in heart through a cardiomyocyte-autonomous transactivation program.

Authors :
Durumutla HB
Prabakaran AD
El Abdellaoui Soussi F
Akinborewa O
Latimer H
McFarland K
Piczer K
Werbrich C
Jain MK
Haldar SM
Quattrocelli M
Source :
JCI insight [JCI Insight] 2024 Nov 22; Vol. 9 (22). Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Nov 22.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Circadian time of intake gates the cardioprotective effects of glucocorticoid administration in both healthy and infarcted hearts. The cardiomyocyte-specific glucocorticoid receptor (GR) and its cofactor, Krüppel-like factor 15 (KLF15), play critical roles in maintaining normal heart function in the long term and serve as pleiotropic regulators of cardiac metabolism. Despite this understanding, the cardiomyocyte-autonomous metabolic targets influenced by the concerted epigenetic action of the GR/KLF15 axis remain undefined. Here, we demonstrated the critical roles of the cardiomyocyte-specific GR and KLF15 in orchestrating a circadian-dependent glucose oxidation program within the heart. Combining integrated transcriptomics and epigenomics with cardiomyocyte-specific inducible ablation of GR or KLF15, we identified their synergistic role in the activation of adiponectin receptor expression (Adipor1) and the mitochondrial pyruvate complex (Mpc1/2), thereby enhancing insulin-stimulated glucose uptake and pyruvate oxidation. Furthermore, in obese diabetic (db/db) mice exhibiting insulin resistance and impaired glucose oxidation, light-phase prednisone administration, as opposed to dark-phase prednisone dosing, restored cardiomyocyte glucose oxidation and improved diastolic function. These effects were blocked by combined in vivo knockdown of GR and KLF15 levels in db/db hearts. In summary, this study leveraged the circadian-dependent cardioprotective effects of glucocorticoids to identify cardiomyocyte-autonomous targets for the GR/KLF15 axis in glucose metabolism.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2379-3708
Volume :
9
Issue :
22
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
JCI insight
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39378111
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.182599