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Effects of Insulin Replacements, Inhibitors of Angiotensin, and PKCβ's Actions to Normalize Cardiac Gene Expression and Fuel Metabolism in Diabetic Rats

  1. Emi Arikawa1,
  2. Ronald C.W. Ma1,
  3. Keiji Isshiki1,
  4. Ivan Luptak2,
  5. Zhiheng He1,
  6. Yutaka Yasuda1,
  7. Yasuhiro Maeno1,
  8. Mary Elizabeth Patti1,
  9. Gordon C. Weir1,
  10. Robert A. Harris3,
  11. Victor A. Zammit4,
  12. Rong Tian2 and
  13. George L. King1
  1. 1Joslin Diabetes Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
  2. 2Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
  3. 3Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana
  4. 4Warwick Medical School, Coventry, U.K
  1. Address correspondence and reprint requests to George L. King, Research Director, Joslin Diabetes Center, One Joslin Place, Boston, MA 02215. E-mail: george.king{at}joslin.harvard.edu

Abstract

High-density oligonucleotide arrays were used to compare gene expression of rat hearts from control, untreated diabetic, and diabetic groups treated with islet cell transplantation (ICT), protein kinase C (PKC)β inhibitor ruboxistaurin, or ACE inhibitor captopril. Among the 376 genes that were differentially expressed between untreated diabetic and control hearts included key metabolic enzymes that account for the decreased glucose and increased free fatty acid utilization in the diabetic heart. ICT or insulin replacements reversed these gene changes with normalization of hyperglycemia, dyslipidemia, and cardiac PKC activation in diabetic rats. Surprisingly, both ruboxistaurin and ACE inhibitors improved the metabolic gene profile (confirmed by real-time RT-PCR and protein analysis) and ameliorated PKC activity in diabetic hearts without altering circulating metabolites. Functional assessments using Langendorff preparations and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy showed a 36% decrease in glucose utilization and an impairment in diastolic function in diabetic rat hearts, which were normalized by all three treatments. In cardiomyocytes, PKC inhibition attenuated fatty acid–induced increases in the metabolic genes PDK4 and UCP3 and also prevented fatty acid–mediated inhibition of basal and insulin-stimulated glucose oxidation. Thus, PKCβ or ACE inhibitors may ameliorate cardiac metabolism and function in diabetes partly by normalization of fuel metabolic gene expression directly in the myocardium.

Footnotes

  • Published ahead of print at http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org on 15 March 2007. DOI: 10.2337/db06-0655.

  • Additional information for this article can be found in an online appendix at http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db06-0655.

  • E.A. and R.C.W.M. contributed equally to this work.

  • The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

    • Accepted February 6, 2007.
    • Received May 12, 2006.
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This Article

  1. Diabetes May 2007 vol. 56 no. 5 1410-1420
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  2. All Versions of this Article:
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