Back to Search Start Over

Sirt5 improves cardiomyocytes fatty acid metabolism and ameliorates cardiac lipotoxicity in diabetic cardiomyopathy via CPT2 de-succinylation

Authors :
Maoxiong Wu
Jing Tan
Zhengyu Cao
Yangwei Cai
Zhaoqi Huang
Zhiteng Chen
Wanbing He
Xiao Liu
Yuan Jiang
Qingyuan Gao
Bingqing Deng
Jingfeng Wang
Woliang Yuan
Haifeng Zhang
Yangxin Chen
Source :
Redox Biology, Vol 73, Iss , Pp 103184- (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2024.

Abstract

Rationale: The disruption of the balance between fatty acid (FA) uptake and oxidation (FAO) leads to cardiac lipotoxicity, serving as the driving force behind diabetic cardiomyopathy (DbCM). Sirtuin 5 (Sirt5), a lysine de-succinylase, could impact diverse metabolic pathways, including FA metabolism. Nevertheless, the precise roles of Sirt5 in cardiac lipotoxicity and DbCM remain unknown. Objective: This study aims to elucidate the role and underlying mechanism of Sirt5 in the context of cardiac lipotoxicity and DbCM. Methods and results: The expression of myocardial Sirt5 was found to be modestly elevated in diabetic heart failure patients and mice. Cardiac dysfunction, hypertrophy and lipotoxicity were exacerbated by ablation of Sirt5 but improved by forced expression of Sirt5 in diabetic mice. Notably, Sirt5 deficiency impaired FAO without affecting the capacity of FA uptake in the diabetic heart, leading to accumulation of FA intermediate metabolites, which mainly included medium- and long-chain fatty acyl-carnitines. Mechanistically, succinylomics analyses identified carnitine palmitoyltransferase 2 (CPT2), a crucial enzyme involved in the reconversion of fatty acyl-carnitines to fatty acyl-CoA and facilitating FAO, as the functional succinylated substrate mediator of Sirt5. Succinylation of Lys424 in CPT2 was significantly increased by Sirt5 deficiency, leading to the inactivation of its enzymatic activity and the subsequent accumulation of fatty acyl-carnitines. CPT2 K424R mutation, which mitigated succinylation modification, counteracted the reduction of enzymatic activity in CPT2 mediated by Sirt5 deficiency, thereby attenuating Sirt5 knockout-induced FAO impairment and lipid deposition. Conclusions: Sirt5 deficiency impairs FAO, leading to cardiac lipotoxicity in the diabetic heart through the succinylation of Lys424 in CPT2. This underscores the potential roles of Sirt5 and CPT2 as therapeutic targets for addressing DbCM.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22132317
Volume :
73
Issue :
103184-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Redox Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.5d6d8b82dc24d0282db5c84be7bbf0e
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2024.103184