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Myocardial Contractile Dysfunction Is Associated With Impaired Mitochondrial Function and Dynamics in Type 2 Diabetic but Not in Obese Patients

David Montaigne, Xavier Maréchal, Augustin Coisne, Nicolas Debry, Thomas Modine, Georges Fayad, Charlotte Potelle, Jean-Marc El Arid, S. Mouton, Yasmine Sebti, Hélène Duez, Sébastien Préau, Isabelle Rémy‐Jouet, Farid Zerimech, Mohamed Koussa

Circulation · 2014 · ▲ 309 citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Obesity and diabetes mellitus are independently associated with the development of heart failure. In this study, we determined the respective effects of obesity, insulin resistance, and diabetes mellitus on the intrinsic contraction and mitochondrial function of the human myocardium before the onset of cardiomyopathy. METHODS AND RESULTS: Right atrial myocardium was obtained from 141 consecutive patients presenting no sign of cardiomyopathy. We investigated ex vivo isometric contraction, mitochondrial respiration and calcium retention capacity, and respiratory chain complex activities and oxidative stress status. Diabetes mellitus was associated with a pronounced impairment of intrinsic contraction, mitochondrial dysfunction(definition), and increased myocardial oxidative stress, regardless of weight status. In contrast, obesity was associated with less pronounced contractile dysfunction without any significant perturbation of mitochondrial function or oxidative stress status. Tested as continuous variables, glycated hemoglobin A1C, but neither body mass index nor the insulin resistance index (homeostasis model assessment-insulin resistance), was independently associated with cardiac mitochondrial function. Furthermore, diabetes mellitus was associated with cardiac mitochondrial network fragmentation and significantly decreased expression of the mitochondrial fusion related protein MFN1. Myocardial MFN1 content was inversely proportional to hemoglobin A1C. CONCLUSION: Worsening of intrinsic myocardial contraction in the transition from obesity to diabetes mellitus is likely related to worsening of cardiac mitochondrial function because impaired mitochondrial function and dynamics and contractile dysfunction are observed in diabetic patients but not in "metabolically healthy" obese patients at early stage in insulin resistance.

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1161/circulationaha.113.008476
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2026-06-12 MST

Cite this

APA
Montaigne, D., Maréchal, X., Coisne, A., Debry, N., Modine, T., Fayad, G., Potelle, C., Arid, J.E., Mouton, S., Sebti, Y., Duez, H., Préau, S., Rémy‐Jouet, I., Zerimech, F., Koussa, M., Richard, V., Nevière, R., Edmé, J., Lefèbvre, P., &amp; Staels, B. (2014). Myocardial Contractile Dysfunction Is Associated With Impaired Mitochondrial Function and Dynamics in Type 2 Diabetic but Not in Obese Patients. <em>Circulation</em>. https://doi.org/10.1161/circulationaha.113.008476
Vancouver
Montaigne D, Maréchal X, Coisne A, Debry N, Modine T, Fayad G, et al. Myocardial Contractile Dysfunction Is Associated With Impaired Mitochondrial Function and Dynamics in Type 2 Diabetic but Not in Obese Patients. Circulation. 2014. doi:10.1161/circulationaha.113.008476.
BibTeX
@article{david2014Myocar, title = {Myocardial Contractile Dysfunction Is Associated With Impaired Mitochondrial Function and Dynamics in Type 2 Diabetic but Not in Obese Patients}, author = {David Montaigne and Xavier Maréchal and Augustin Coisne and Nicolas Debry and Thomas Modine and Georges Fayad and Charlotte Potelle and Jean-Marc El Arid and S. Mouton and Yasmine Sebti and Hélène Duez and Sébastien Préau and Isabelle Rémy‐Jouet and Farid Zerimech and Mohamed Koussa and Vincent Richard and Rémi Nevière and Jean‐Louis Edmé and Philippe Lefèbvre and Bart Staels}, journal = {Circulation}, year = {2014}, doi = {10.1161/circulationaha.113.008476}, }

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