Electrostimulation enhances FAT/CD36-mediated long-chain fatty acid uptake by isolated rat cardiac myocytes

J Luiken, J Willems… - American Journal of …, 2001 - journals.physiology.org
J Luiken, J Willems, GJ Van der Vusse, JFC Glatz
American Journal of Physiology-Endocrinology and Metabolism, 2001journals.physiology.org
We investigated palmitate uptake and utilization by contracting cardiac myocytes in
suspension to explore the link between long-chain fatty acid (FA) uptake and cellular
metabolism, in particular the role of fatty acid translocase (FAT)/CD36-mediated
transsarcolemmal FA transport. For this, an experimental setup was developed to electrically
stimulate cardiomyocytes in multiple parallel incubations. Electrostimulation at voltages≥
170 V resulted in cellular contraction with no detrimental effect on cellular integrity. At 200 V …
We investigated palmitate uptake and utilization by contracting cardiac myocytes in suspension to explore the link between long-chain fatty acid (FA) uptake and cellular metabolism, in particular the role of fatty acid translocase (FAT)/CD36-mediated transsarcolemmal FA transport. For this, an experimental setup was developed to electrically stimulate cardiomyocytes in multiple parallel incubations. Electrostimulation at voltages ≥170 V resulted in cellular contraction with no detrimental effect on cellular integrity. At 200 V and 4 Hz, palmitate uptake (measured after 3-min incubation) was enhanced 1.5-fold. In both quiescent and contracting myocytes, after their uptake, palmitate was largely and rapidly esterified, mainly into triacylglycerols. Palmitate oxidation (measured after 30 min) contributed to 22% of palmitate taken up by quiescent cardiomyocytes and, after stimulation at 4 Hz, was increased 2.8-fold to contribute to 39% of palmitate utilization. The electrostimulation-mediated increase in palmitate uptake was blocked in the presence of either verapamil, a contraction inhibitor, or sulfo-N-succinimidyl-FA esters, specific inhibitors of FAT/CD36. These data indicate that, in contracting cardiac myocytes, palmitate uptake is increased due to increased flux through FAT/CD36.
American Physiological Society