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Allele-specific dysregulation of lipid and energy metabolism in early-stage hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.

Authors :
Vaniya A
Karlstaedt A
Gulkok D
Thottakara T
Liu Y
Fan S
Eades H
Vakrou S
Fukunaga R
Vernon HJ
Fiehn O
Roselle Abraham M
Source :
Journal of molecular and cellular cardiology plus [J Mol Cell Cardiol Plus] 2024 Jun; Vol. 8. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Mar 31.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Introduction: Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) results from pathogenic variants in sarcomeric protein genes that increase myocyte energy demand and lead to cardiac hypertrophy. However, it is unknown whether a common metabolic trait underlies cardiac phenotype at the early disease stage. To address this question and define cardiac biochemical pathology in early-stage HCM, we studied two HCM mouse models that express pathogenic variants in cardiac troponin T ( Tnt2 ) or myosin heavy chain ( Myh6 ) genes, and have marked differences in cardiac imaging phenotype, mitochondrial function at early disease stage.<br />Methods: We used a combination of echocardiography, transcriptomics, mass spectrometry-based untargeted metabolomics (GC-TOF, HILIC, CSH-QTOF), and computational modeling (CardioNet) to examine cardiac structural and metabolic remodeling at early disease stage (5 weeks of age) in R92W-TnT <superscript>+/-</superscript> and R403Q-MyHC <superscript>+/-</superscript> mutant mice. Data from mutants was compared with respective littermate controls (WT).<br />Results: Allele-specific differences in cardiac phenotype, gene expression and metabolites were observed at early disease stage. LV diastolic dysfunction was prominent in TnT mutants. Differentially-expressed genes in TnT mutant hearts were predominantly enriched in the Krebs cycle, respiratory electron transport, and branched-chain amino acid metabolism, whereas MyHC mutants were enriched in mitochondrial biogenesis, calcium homeostasis, and liver-X-receptor signaling. Both mutant hearts demonstrated significant alterations in levels of purine nucleosides, trisaccharides, dicarboxylic acids, acylcarnitines, phosphatidylethanolamines, phosphatidylinositols, ceramides and triglycerides; 40.4 % of lipids and 24.7 % of metabolites were significantly different in TnT mutants, whereas 10.4 % of lipids and 5.8 % of metabolites were significantly different in MyHC mutants. Both mutant hearts had a lower abundance of unsaturated long-chain acyl-carnitines (18:1, 18:2, 20:1), but only TnT mutants showed enrichment of FA18:0 in ceramide and cardiolipin species. CardioNet predicted impaired energy substrate metabolism and greater phospholipid remodeling in TnT mutants than in MyHC mutants.<br />Conclusions: Our systems biology approach revealed marked differences in metabolic remodeling in R92W-TnT and R403Q-MyHC mutant hearts, with TnT mutants showing greater derangements than MyHC mutants, at early disease stage. Changes in cardiolipin composition in TnT mutants could contribute to impairment of energy metabolism and diastolic dysfunction observed in this study, and predispose to energetic stress, ventricular arrhythmias under high workloads such as exercise.<br />Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2772-9761
Volume :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of molecular and cellular cardiology plus
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39430912
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmccpl.2024.100073