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Contribution of Impaired Myocardial Insulin Signaling to Mitochondrial Dysfunction and Oxidative Stress in the Heart

Sihem Boudina, Heiko Bugger, Sandra Sena, Brian T. O’Neill, Vlad G. Zaha, Olesya Ilkun, J. J. Wright, Pradip Kumar Mazumder, Eric Palfreyman, Timothy J. Tidwell, Heather Theobald, Oleh Khalimonchuk, Benjamin Wayment, Xiaoming Sheng, Kenneth J. Rodnick

Circulation · 2009 · ▲ 310 citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Diabetes-associated cardiac dysfunction is associated with mitochondrial dysfunction(definition) and oxidative stress, which may contribute to left ventricular dysfunction. The contribution of altered myocardial insulin action, independent of associated changes in systemic metabolism, is incompletely understood. The present study tested the hypothesis that perinatal loss of insulin signaling in the heart impairs mitochondrial function. METHODS AND RESULTS: In 8-week-old mice with cardiomyocyte deletion of insulin receptors (CIRKO), inotropic reserves were reduced, and mitochondria manifested respiratory defects for pyruvate that was associated with proportionate reductions in catalytic subunits of pyruvate dehydrogenase. Progressive age-dependent defects in oxygen consumption and ATP synthesis with the substrate glutamate and the fatty acid derivative palmitoyl-carnitine were observed. Mitochondria also were uncoupled when exposed to palmitoyl-carnitine, in part as a result of increased reactive oxygen species production and oxidative stress. Although proteomic and genomic approaches revealed a reduction in subsets of genes and proteins related to oxidative phosphorylation, no reductions in maximal activities of mitochondrial electron transport chain complexes were found. However, a disproportionate reduction in tricarboxylic acid cycle and fatty acid oxidation proteins in mitochondria suggests that defects in fatty acid and pyruvate metabolism and tricarboxylic acid flux may explain the mitochondrial dysfunction observed. CONCLUSIONS: Impaired myocardial insulin signaling promotes oxidative stress and mitochondrial uncoupling, which, together with reduced tricarboxylic acid and fatty acid oxidative capacity, impairs mitochondrial energetics. This study identifies specific contributions of impaired insulin action to mitochondrial dysfunction in the heart.

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1161/circulationaha.108.792101
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2026-06-12 MST

Cite this

APA
Boudina, S., Bugger, H., Sena, S., O’Neill, B.T., Zaha, V.G., Ilkun, O., Wright, J.J., Mazumder, P.K., Palfreyman, E., Tidwell, T.J., Theobald, H., Khalimonchuk, O., Wayment, B., Sheng, X., Rodnick, K.J., Centini, R., Chen, D., Litwin, S.E., Weimer, B.E., &amp; Abel, E.D. (2009). Contribution of Impaired Myocardial Insulin Signaling to Mitochondrial Dysfunction and Oxidative Stress in the Heart. <em>Circulation</em>. https://doi.org/10.1161/circulationaha.108.792101
Vancouver
Boudina S, Bugger H, Sena S, O’Neill BT, Zaha VG, Ilkun O, et al. Contribution of Impaired Myocardial Insulin Signaling to Mitochondrial Dysfunction and Oxidative Stress in the Heart. Circulation. 2009. doi:10.1161/circulationaha.108.792101.
BibTeX
@article{sihem2009Contri, title = {Contribution of Impaired Myocardial Insulin Signaling to Mitochondrial Dysfunction and Oxidative Stress in the Heart}, author = {Sihem Boudina and Heiko Bugger and Sandra Sena and Brian T. O’Neill and Vlad G. Zaha and Olesya Ilkun and J. J. Wright and Pradip Kumar Mazumder and Eric Palfreyman and Timothy J. Tidwell and Heather Theobald and Oleh Khalimonchuk and Benjamin Wayment and Xiaoming Sheng and Kenneth J. Rodnick and Ryan Centini and Dong Chen and Sheldon E. Litwin and Bart E. Weimer and E. Dale Abel}, journal = {Circulation}, year = {2009}, doi = {10.1161/circulationaha.108.792101}, }

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