恩帕吉菲
医学
内科学
糖尿病性心肌病
心力衰竭
心脏病学
内分泌学
心功能曲线
舒张期
糖尿病
心肌病
2型糖尿病
血压
作者
Julia Moellmann,Barbara M. Klinkhammer,Patrick Droste,Ben A. Kappel,Elias Haj-Yehia,Sebastian Maxeiner,Anna Artati,Jerzy Adamski,Peter Boor,Katharina Schütt,Gary D. Lopaschuk,Subodh Verma,Nikolaus Marx,Michael Lehrke
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.bbadis.2020.165807
摘要
Investigation of the effect of SGLT2 inhibition by empagliflozin on left ventricular function in a model of diabetic cardiomyopathy. SGLT2 inhibition is a new strategy to treat diabetes. In the EMPA-REG Outcome trial empagliflozin treatment reduced cardiovascular and overall mortality in patients with diabetes presumably due to beneficial cardiac effects, leading to reduced heart failure hospitalization. The relevant mechanisms remain currently elusive but might be mediated by a shift in cardiac substrate utilization leading to improved energetic supply to the heart. We used db/db mice on high-fat western diet with or without empagliflozin treatment as a model of severe diabetes. Left ventricular function was assessed by pressure catheter with or without dobutamine stress. Treatment with empagliflozin significantly increased glycosuria, improved glucose metabolism, ameliorated left ventricular diastolic function and reduced mortality of mice. This was associated with reduced cardiac glucose concentrations and decreased calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaMKII) activation with subsequent less phosphorylation of the ryanodine receptor (RyR). No change of cardiac ketone bodies or branched-chain amino acid (BCAA) metabolites in serum was detected nor was cardiac expression of relevant catabolic enzymes for these substrates affected. In a murine model of severe diabetes empagliflozin-dependent SGLT2 inhibition improved diastolic function and reduced mortality. Improvement of diastolic function was likely mediated by reduced spontaneous diastolic sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) calcium release but independent of changes in cardiac ketone and BCAA metabolism.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI