Short-Chain Fatty Acids Outpace Ketone Oxidation in the Failing Heart

Author:

Carley Andrew N.1,Maurya Santosh K.1,Fasano Matthew1,Wang Yang1,Selzman Craig H.23,Drakos Stavros G.23,Lewandowski E. Douglas1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Davis Heart and Lung Research Institute and Department of Internal Medicine, The Ohio State University College of Medicine, Columbus (A.N.C., S.K.M., M.F., Y.W., E.D.L.).

2. Nora Eccles Harrison Cardiovascular Research and Training Institute, University of Utah, Salt Lake City (C.H.S., S.G.D.).

3. Divisions of Cardiothoracic Surgery (C.H.S.), University of Utah Health, Salt Lake City.

Abstract

Background: The failing heart is energy starved with impaired oxidation of long-chain fatty acids (LCFAs) at the level of reduced CPT1 (carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1) activity at the outer mitochondrial membrane. Recent work shows elevated ketone oxidation in failing hearts as an alternate carbon source for oxidative ATP generation. We hypothesized that another short-chain carbon source, short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) that bypass carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1, could similarly support energy production in failing hearts. Methods: Cardiac hypertrophy and dysfunction were induced in rats by transverse-aortic constriction (TAC). Fourteen weeks after TAC or sham operation, isolated hearts were perfused with either the 4 carbon, 13 C-labeled ketone (D3-hydroxybutyrate) or the 4 carbon, 13 C-labeled SCFA butyrate in the presence of glucose and the LCFA palmitate. Oxidation of ketone and SCFA was compared by in vitro 13 C nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, as was the capacity for short-chain carbon sources to compensate for impaired LCFA oxidation in the hypertrophic heart. Adaptive changes in enzyme expression and content for the distinct pathways of ketone and SCFA oxidation were examined in both failing rat and human hearts. Results: TAC produced pathological hypertrophy and increased the fractional contributions of ketone to acetyl coenzyme-A production in the tricarboxylic acid cycle (0.60±0.02 sham ketone versus 0.70±0.02 TAC ketone; P <0.05). However, butyrate oxidation in failing hearts was 15% greater (0.803±0.020 TAC SCFA) than ketone oxidation. SCFA was also more readily oxidized than ketone in sham hearts by 15% (0.693±0.020 sham SCFA). Despite greater SFCA oxidation, TAC did not change short-chain acyl coenzyme-A dehydrogenase content. However, failing hearts of humans and the rat model both contain significant increases in acyl coenzyme-A synthetase medium-chain 3 enzyme gene expression and protein content. The increased oxidation of SCFA and ketones occurred at the expense of LCFA oxidation, with LCFA contributing less to acetyl coenzyme-A production in failing hearts perfused with SCFA (0.190±0.012 TAC SCFA versus 0.3163±0.0360 TAC ketone). Conclusions: SCFAs are more readily oxidized than ketones in failing hearts, despite both bypassing reduced CPT1 activity and represent an unexplored carbon source for energy production in failing hearts.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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