8 resultados para HIGH-SALT DIET

em DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center


Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Obesity and diabetes are frequently associated with cardiovascular disease. When a normal heart is subjected to brief/sublethal repetitive ischemia and reperfusion (I/R), adaptive responses are activated to preserve cardiac structure and function. These responses include but are not limited to alterations in cardiac metabolism, reduced calcium responsiveness, and induction of antioxidant enzymes. In a model of ischemic cardiomyopathy inducible by brief repetitive I/R, we hypothesized that dysregulation of these adaptive responses in diet-induced obese (DIO) mice would contribute to enhanced myocardial injury. DIO C57BL/6J mice were subjected to 15 min of daily repetitive I/R while under short-acting anesthesia, a protocol that results in the development of fibrotic cardiomyopathy. Cardiac lipids and candidate gene expression were analyzed at 3 days, and histology at 5 days of repetitive I/R. Total free fatty acids (FFAs) in the cardiac extracts of DIO mice were significantly elevated, reflecting primarily the dietary fatty acid (FA) composition. Compared with lean controls, cardiac FA oxidation (FAO) capacity of DIO mice was significantly higher, concurrent with increased expression of FA metabolism gene transcripts. Following 15 min of daily repetitive I/R for 3 or 5 days, DIO mice exhibited increased susceptibility to I/R and, in contrast to lean mice, developed microinfarction, which was associated with an exaggerated inflammatory response. Repetitive I/R in DIO mice was associated with more profound significant downregulation of FA metabolism gene transcripts and elevated FFAs and triglycerides. Maladaptive metabolic changes of FA metabolism contribute to enhanced myocardial injury in diet-induced obesity.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Obesity and diabetes are associated with increased fatty acid availability in excess of muscle fatty acid oxidation capacity. This mismatch is implicated in the pathogenesis of cardiac contractile dysfunction and also in the development of skeletal-muscle insulin resistance. We tested the hypothesis that 'Western' and high fat diets differentially cause maladaptation of cardiac- and skeletal-muscle fatty acid oxidation, resulting in cardiac contractile dysfunction. Wistar rats were fed on low fat, 'Western' or high fat (10, 45 or 60% calories from fat respectively) diet for acute (1 day to 1 week), short (4-8 weeks), intermediate (16-24 weeks) or long (32-48 weeks) term. Oleate oxidation in heart muscle ex vivo increased with high fat diet at all time points investigated. In contrast, cardiac oleate oxidation increased with Western diet in the acute, short and intermediate term, but not in the long term. Consistent with fatty acid oxidation maladaptation, cardiac power decreased with long-term Western diet only. In contrast, soleus muscle oleate oxidation (ex vivo) increased only in the acute and short term with either Western or high fat feeding. Fatty acid-responsive genes, including PDHK4 (pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4) and CTE1 (cytosolic thioesterase 1), increased in heart and soleus muscle to a greater extent with feeding a high fat diet compared with a Western diet. In conclusion, we implicate inadequate induction of a cassette of fatty acid-responsive genes, and impaired activation of fatty acid oxidation, in the development of cardiac dysfunction with Western diet.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Obesity is postulated to be one of the major risk factors for pancreatic cancer, and recently it was indicated that an elevated body mass index (BMI correlates strongly with a decrease in patient survival. Despite the evident relationship, the molecular mechanisms involved are unclear. Oncogenic mutation of K-Ras is found early and is universal in pancreatic cancer. Extensive evidence indicates oncogenic K-Ras is not entirely active and it requires a triggering event to surpass the activity of Ras beyond the threshold necessary for a Ras-inflammation feed-forward loop. We hypothesize that high fat intake induces a persistent low level inflammatory response triggering increased K-Ras activity and that Cox-2 is essential for this inflammatory reaction. To determine this, LSL-K-Ras mice were crossed with Ela-CreER (Acinar-specific) or Pdx-1-Cre (Pancreas-specific) to “knock-in” oncogenic K-Ras. Additionally, these animals were crossed with Cox-2 conditional knockout mice to access the importance of Cox-2 in the inflammatory loop present. The mice were fed isocaloric diets containing 60% energy or 10% energy from fat. We found that a high fat diet increased K-Ras activity, PanIN formation, and fibrotic stroma significantly compared to a control diet. Genetic deletion of Cox-2 prevented high fat diet induced fibrosis and PanIN formation in oncogenic K-Ras expressing mice. Additionally, long term consumption of high fat diet, increased the progression of PanIN lesions leading to invasive cancer and decreased overall survival rate. These findings indicate that a high fat diet can stimulate the activation of oncogenic K-Ras and initiate an inflammatory feed forward loop requiring Cox-2 leading to inflammation, fibrosis, and PanINs. This mechanism could explain the relationship between a high fat diet and elevated risk for pancreatic cancer.

Relevância:

90.00% 90.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The "lipotoxic footprint" of cardiac maladaptation in diet-induced obesity is poorly defined. We investigated how manipulation of dietary lipid and carbohydrate influenced potential lipotoxic species in the failing heart. In Wistar rats, contractile dysfunction develops at 48 weeks on a high-fat/high-carbohydrate "Western" diet, but not on low-fat/high-carbohydrate or high-fat diets. Cardiac content of the lipotoxic candidates--diacylglycerol, ceramide, lipid peroxide, and long-chain acyl-CoA species--was measured at different time points by high-performance liquid chromatography and biochemical assays, as was lipogenic capacity in the heart and liver by qRT-PCR and radiometric assays. Changes in membranes fluidity were also monitored using fluorescence polarization. We report that Western feeding induced a 40% decrease in myocardial palmitoleoyl-CoA content and a similar decrease in the unsaturated-to-saturated fatty acid ratio. These changes were associated with impaired cardiac mitochondrial membrane fluidity. At the same time, hepatic lipogenic capacity was increased in animals fed Western diet (+270% fatty acid elongase activity compared with high-fat diet), while fatty acid desaturase activity decreased over time. Our findings suggest that dysregulation of lipogenesis is a significant component of heart failure in diet-induced obesity.

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

A membrane fraction (M$\sb{\rm PS}$), enriched in Cl$\sp-$ channels, has been isolated from bovine tracheal epithelia and renal cortex homogenates by hydrophobic chromatography. The tracheal fraction shows a 37 fold enrichment of Cl$\sp-$ channels over crude tracheal homogenates by net Cl$\sp-$ measurements in membrane vesicles. Alkaline phosphatase and (Na$\sp+$ + K$\sp+$)-ATPase are not found in these membranes, suggesting that they are not apical or basolateral plasma membranes. The M$\sb{\rm PS}$ fraction exhibits a protein profile unlike that of other membrane fractions with major proteins of 200 kDa and 42 kDa, proteins of 30 to 35 kDa, and lesser amounts of other proteins. Reconstitution of M$\sb{\rm PS}$ fractions from both trachea and kidney into planar lipid bilayers demonstrates the presence of a single type of anion channel. The current-voltage relationship of this channel is linear with a slope conductance of 84 pS in symmetrical 400 mM KCl, and is identical to that of the predominant anion channel observed in tracheal apical membranes under similar conditions (Valdivia, Dubinsky, and Coronado. Science, 1988). In addition, the voltage dependence, selectivity sequence of Cl$\sp- >$ Br$\sp- \ge$ I$\sp-$, and inhibition by low concentrations of the Cl$\sp-$ channel blocker, DIDS, correspond to those of the predominant apical membrane channel. Thus, although the M$\sb{\rm PS}$ fraction appears to be of subcellular origin, it may be functionally related to an apical membrane Cl$\sp-$ permeability. When renal M$\sb{\rm PS}$ membranes were treated with the detergent octyl-glucoside (OG, 2%) and centrifuged, the supernatant, sM$\sb{\rm PS}$, showed a 2 to 7-fold enrichment in specific Cl$\sp-$ flux activity compared with the detergent treated M$\sb{\rm PS}$. These solubilized proteins were then size fractionated on a Superose 12 HPLC gel filtration column, followed by fractionation on a Mono Q HPLC anion exchange column. Fractions that eluted in high salt consistently exhibited significant Cl$\sp-$ flux activity. These fractions had protein profiles consisting of a major band at 34 kDa, a band at 66 kDa, and variable faint bands. Fractions eluting in lower salt had protein profiles consisting of a single band at 34 kDa, and often had little or no Cl$\sp-$ flux activity. However, co-reconstitution of the low salt, solely 34 kDa protein-containing Mono Q fractions with sM$\sb{\rm PS}$ resulted in an enhancement of flux activity compared to that of sM$\sb{\rm PS}$ reconstituted alone. Flux assays of active Mono Q fractions showed that the channel retained its DIDS sensitivity. Applying sM$\sb{\rm PS}$ to a DIDS-affinity column and eluting with salt resulted in fractions with protein profiles again consisting of at least one major band at 34 kDa, a band at 66 kDa, and variable faint bands. Co-reconstitution with sM$\sb{\rm PS}$ again resulted in an enhancement of activity. Thus, the 34 kDa protein appears to be a component of the M$\sb{\rm PS}$ Cl$\sp-$ channel. ^

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Obesity and diabetes are metabolic disorders associated with fatty acid availability in excess of the tissues' capacity for fatty acid oxidation. This mismatch is implicated in the pathogenesis of cardiac contractile dysfunction and also in skeletal muscle insulin resistance. My dissertation will present work to test the overall hypothesis that "western" and high fat diets differentially affect cardiac and skeletal muscle fatty acid oxidation, the expression of fatty acid responsive genes, and cardiac contractile function. Wistar rats were fed a low fat, "western," or high fat (10%, 45%, or 60% calories from fat, respectively) diet for acute (1 day to 1 week), short (4 to 8 weeks), intermediate (16 to 24 weeks), or long (32 to 48 weeks) term. With high fat diet, cardiac oleate oxidation increased at all time points investigated. In contrast, with western diet cardiac oleate oxidation increased in the acute, short and intermediate term, but not in the long term. Consistent with a maladaptation of fatty acid oxidation, cardiac power (measured ex vivo) decreased with long term western diet only. In contrast to the heart, soleus muscle oleate oxidation increased only in the acute and short term with either western or high fat feeding. Transcript analysis revealed that several fatty acid responsive genes, including pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase 4, uncoupling protein 3, mitochondrial thioesterase 1, and cytosolic thioesterase 1 increased in heart and soleus muscle to a greater extent with high fat diet, versus western diet, feeding. In conclusion, the data implicate inadequate induction of a cassette of fatty acid responsive genes in both the heart and skeletal muscle by western diet resulting in impaired activation of fatty acid oxidation, and the development of cardiac dysfunction. ^

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Atherosclerosis is a complex disease resulting from interactions of genetic and environmental risk factors leading to heart failure and stroke. Using an atherosclerotic mouse model (ldlr-/-, apobec1-/- designated as LDb), we performed microarray analysis to identify candidate genes and pathways, which are most perturbed in changes in the following risk factors: genetics (control C57BL/6 vs. LDb mice), shearstress (lesion-prone vs. lesion-resistant regions in LDb mice), diet (chow vs. high fat fed LDb mice) and age (2-month-old vs. 8-month old LDb mice). ^ Atherosclerotic lesion quantification and lipid profile studies were performed to assess the disease phenotype. A microarray study was performed on lesion-prone and lesion-resistant regions of each aorta. Briefly, 32 male C57BL/6 and LDb mice (n =16/each) were fed on either chow or high fat diet, sacrificed at 2- and 8-months old, and RNA isolated from the aortic lesion-prone and aortic lesion-resistant segments. Using 64 Affymetrix Murine 430 2.0 chips, we profiled differentially expressed genes with the cut off value of FDR ≤ 0.15 for t-test, and q <0.0001 for the ANOVA. The data were normalized using two normalization methods---invariant probe sets (Loess) and Quantile normalization, the statistical analysis was performed using t-tests and ANOVA, and pathway characterization was done using Pathway Express (Wayne State). The result identified the calcium signaling pathway as the most significant overrepresented pathway, followed by focal adhesion. In the calcium signaling pathway, 56 genes were found to be significantly differentially expressed out of 180 genes listed in the KEGG calcium signaling pathway. Nineteen of these genes were consistently identified by both statistical tests, 11 of which were unique to the test, and 26 were unique to the ANOVA test, using the cutoffs noted above. ^ In conclusion, this finding suggested that hypercholesterolemia drives the disease progression by altering the expression of calcium channels and regulators which subsequently results in cell differentiation, growth, adhesion, cytoskeletal change and death. Clinically, this pathway may serve as an important target for future therapeutic intervention, and thus the calcium signaling pathway may serve as an important target for future diagnostic and therapeutic intervention. ^

Relevância:

80.00% 80.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Human heparin/heparan sulfate interacting protein/L29 (HIP/L29) is a heparin/heparan sulfate (Hp/HS) binding protein found in many adult human tissues. Potential functions of this protein are promotion of embryo adhesion, modulation of blood coagulation, and control of cell growth. While these activities are diverse, the ability of human HIP/L29 to interact with Hp/HS at the cell surface may be a unifying mechanism of action since Hp/HS influences all of these processes. A murine ortholog has been identified that has 78.8% homology over the entire sequence and identity over the N-terminal 64 amino acids when compared to human HIP/L29. Northern, Western, and immunohistochemical analysis shows that murine HIP/L29 mRNA and protein are expressed in a tissue specific manner. Murine HIP/L29 is enriched in the membrane fraction of NmuMG cells where it is eluted with high salt, suggesting that it is a peripheral membrane protein. The ability of murine HIP/L29 to bind Hp is verified by studies using native and recombinant forms of murine HIP/L29. A synthetic peptide (HIP peptide-2) derived from the identical N-terminal region of HIP/L29 proteins was tested for the ability to bind Hp and support cell adhesion. This peptide was chosen because it conforms to a proposed consensus sequence for Hp/HS binding peptides. HIP peptide-2 binds Hp in a dose-dependent, saturable, and selective manner and supports Hp-dependent cell adhesion. However, a scrambled form of this peptide displayed similar activities indicating a lack of peptide sequence specificity required for activity. Lastly, an unbiased approach was used to identify sequences within human and mouse HIP/L29 proteins necessary for Hp/HS binding. A panel of recombinant proteins was made that collectively are deficient in every human HIP/L29 domain. The activities of these deletion mutants and recombinant murine HIP/L29 were compared to the activity of recombinant human HIP/L29 in a number of assays designed to look at differences in the ability to bind Hp/HS. These studies suggest that each domain within human HIP/L29 is important for binding to Hp/HS and divergences in the C-terminus of human and mouse HIP/L29 account for a decrease in murine HIP/L29 affinity for Hp/HS. It is apparent that multiple domains within human and mouse HIP/L29 contribute to the function of Hp/HS binding. The interaction of multiple HIP/L29 domains with Hp/HS will influence the biological activity of HIP/L29 proteins. ^