Open access · OA
via OpenAlex
Obesity, Hypertension, and Cardiac Dysfunction
Alan J. Mouton, Xuan Li, Michael E. Hall, John E. Hall
Circulation Research · 2020 · ▲ 542 citations
Abstract
Obesity and hypertension, which often coexist, are major risk factors for heart failure and are characterized by chronic, low-grade inflammation, which promotes adverse cardiac remodeling. While macrophages play a key role in cardiac remodeling, dysregulation of macrophage polarization between the proinflammatory M1 and anti-inflammatory M2 phenotypes promotes excessive inflammation and cardiac injury. Metabolic shifting between glycolysis and mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation has been implicated in macrophage polarization. M1 macrophages primarily rely on glycolysis, whereas M2 macrophages rely on the tricarboxylic acid cycle and oxidative phosphorylation; thus, factors that affect macrophage metabolism may disrupt M1/M2 homeostasis and exacerbate inflammation. The mechanisms by which obesity and hypertension may synergistically induce macrophage metabolic dysfunction, particularly during cardiac remodeling, are not fully understood. We propose that obesity and hypertension induce M1 macrophage polarization via mechanisms that directly target macrophage metabolism, including changes in circulating glucose and fatty acid substrates, lipotoxicity, and tissue hypoxia. We discuss canonical and novel proinflammatory roles of macrophages during obesity-hypertension-induced cardiac injury, including diastolic dysfunction and impaired calcium handling. Finally, we discuss the current status of potential therapies to target macrophage metabolism during heart failure, including antidiabetic therapies, anti-inflammatory therapies, and novel immunometabolic agents.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- OpenAlex
- DOI
- 10.1161/circresaha.119.312321
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-06-11 MST
Cite this
APA
Mouton, A.J., Li, X., Hall, M.E., & Hall, J.E. (2020). Obesity, Hypertension, and Cardiac Dysfunction. <em>Circulation Research</em>. https://doi.org/10.1161/circresaha.119.312321
Vancouver
Mouton AJ, Li X, Hall ME, Hall JE. Obesity, Hypertension, and Cardiac Dysfunction. Circulation Research. 2020. doi:10.1161/circresaha.119.312321.
BibTeX
@article{alan2020Obesit,
title = {Obesity, Hypertension, and Cardiac Dysfunction},
author = {Alan J. Mouton and Xuan Li and Michael E. Hall and John E. Hall},
journal = {Circulation Research},
year = {2020},
doi = {10.1161/circresaha.119.312321},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
Journal of Clinical Investigation 2018
Open access · OA
Mitochondrial dysfunction in pathophysiology of heart failure
Circulation Research 2008
Open access · OA
Role of Mitochondrial Dysfunction in Insulin Resistance
Circulation Research 2018
Open access · OA
Diabetic Cardiomyopathy
Frontiers in Immunology 2020
Open access · CC-BY
The Challenge by Multiple Environmental and Biological Factors Induce Inflammation in Aging: Their Role in the Promotion of Chronic Disease
Frontiers in Endocrinology 2023
Open access · CC-BY
The impact of oxidative stress-induced mitochondrial dysfunction on diabetic microvascular complications
Stem cells translational medicine 2026
Open access · OA