Cardiac Insulin Resistance and MicroRNA Modulators

Author:

Pulakat Lakshmi1234,Aroor Annayya R.134,Gul Rukhsana134,Sowers James R.1345

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65212, USA

2. Department of Nutrition and Exercise Physiology, School of Medicine, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65212, USA

3. Diabetes and Cardiovascular Laboratory, School of Medicine, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65212, USA

4. Harry S. Truman Memorial Veterans' Hospital, Columbia, MO 65201, USA

5. Department of Medical Pharmacology and Physiology, School of Medicine, University of Missouri, One Hospital Drive, Columbia, MO 65212, USA

Abstract

Cardiac insulin resistance is a metabolic and functional disorder that is often associated with obesity and/or the cardiorenal metabolic syndrome (CRS), and this disorder may be accentuated by chronic alcohol consumption. In conditions of over-nutrition, increased insulin (INS) and angiotensin II (Ang II) activate mammalian target for rapamycin (mTOR)/p70 S6 kinase (S6K1) signaling, whereas chronic alcohol consumption inhibits mTOR/S6K1 activation in cardiac tissue. Although excessive activation of mTOR/S6K1 induces cardiac INS resistance via serine phosphorylation of INS receptor substrates (IRS-1/2), it also renders cardioprotection via increased Ang II receptor 2 (AT2R) upregulation and adaptive hypertrophy. In the INS-resistant and hyperinsulinemic Zucker obese (ZO) rat, a rodent model for CRS, activation of mTOR/S6K1signaling in cardiac tissue is regulated by protective feed-back mechanisms involving mTOR↔AT2R signaling loop and profile changes of microRNA that target S6K1. Such regulation may play a role in attenuating progressive heart failure. Conversely, alcohol-mediated inhibition of mTOR/S6K1, down-regulation of INS receptor and growth-inhibitory mir-200 family, and upregulation of mir-212 that promotes fetal gene program may exacerbate CRS-related cardiomyopathy.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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