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Excessive cardiac insulin signaling exacerbates systolic dysfunction induced by pressure overload in rodents

Authors :
Shimizu, Ippei
Minamino, Tohru
Toko, Haruhiro
Okado, Sho
Ikeda, Hiroyuki
Yasuda, Noritaka
Tateno, Kaoru
Moriya, Junji
Yokoyama, Masataka
Nojima, Aika
Koh, Gou Young
Akazawa, Hiroshi
Shiojima, Ichiro
Kahn, C. Ronald
Abel, E. Dale
Komuro, Issei
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. May, 2010, Vol. 120 Issue 5, p1506, 9 p.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Although many animal studies indicate insulin has cardioprotective effects, clinical studies suggest a link between insulin resistance (hyperinsulinemia) and heart failure (HF). Here we have demonstrated that excessive cardiac insulin signaling exacerbates systolic dysfunction induced by pressure overload in rodents. Chronic pressure overload induced hepatic insulin resistance and plasma insulin level elevation. In contrast, cardiac insulin signaling was upregulated by chronic pressure overload because of mechanical stretch-induced activation of cardio myocyte insulin receptors and upregulation of insulin receptor and Irs1 expression. Chronic pressure overload increased the mismatch between cardiomyocyte size and vascularity, thereby inducing myocardial hypoxia and cardiomyocyte death. Inhibition of hyperinsulinemia substantially improved pressure overload-induced cardiac dysfunction, improving myocardial hypoxia and decreasing cardiomyocyte death. Likewise, the cardiomyocyte-specific reduction of insulin receptor expression prevented cardiac ischemia and hypertrophy and attenuated systolic dysfunction due to pressure overload. Conversely, treatment of type 1 diabetic mice with insulin improved hyperglycemia during pressure overload, but increased myocardial ischemia and cardiomyocyte death, thereby inducing HF. Promoting angiogenesis restored the cardiac dysfunction induced by insulin treatment. We therefore suggest that the use of insulin to control hyperglycemia could be harmful in the setting of pressure overload and that modulation of insulin signaling is crucial for the treatment of HF.<br />Introduction Cardiac hypertrophy is defined as an increment: of ventricular mass resulting from increased cardiomyocyte size and is the adaptive response of the heart to an increased hemodynamic load due [...]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219738
Volume :
120
Issue :
5
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.241944827
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI40096