Cardiac lipid accumulation associated with diastolic dysfunction in obese mice

C Christoffersen, E Bollano, MLS Lindegaard… - …, 2003 - academic.oup.com
C Christoffersen, E Bollano, MLS Lindegaard, ED Bartels, JP Goetze, CB Andersen…
Endocrinology, 2003academic.oup.com
Obesity may confer cardiac dysfunction due to lipid accumulation in cardiomyocytes. To test
this idea, we examined whether obese ob/ob mice display heart lipid accumulation and
cardiac dysfunction. Ob/ob mouse hearts had increased expression of genes mediating
extracellular generation, transport across the myocyte cell membrane, intracellular transport,
mitochondrial uptake, and β-oxidation of fatty acids compared with ob/+ mice. Accordingly,
ob/ob mouse hearts contained more triglyceride (6.8±0.4 vs. 2.3±0.4 μg/mg; P< 0.0005) than …
Abstract
Obesity may confer cardiac dysfunction due to lipid accumulation in cardiomyocytes. To test this idea, we examined whether obese ob/ob mice display heart lipid accumulation and cardiac dysfunction. Ob/ob mouse hearts had increased expression of genes mediating extracellular generation, transport across the myocyte cell membrane, intracellular transport, mitochondrial uptake, and β-oxidation of fatty acids compared with ob/+ mice. Accordingly, ob/ob mouse hearts contained more triglyceride (6.8 ± 0.4 vs. 2.3 ± 0.4 μg/mg; P < 0.0005) than ob/+ mouse hearts. Histological examinations showed marked accumulation of neutral lipid droplets within cardiac myocytes but not increased deposition of collagen between myocytes in ob/ob compared with ob/+ mouse hearts. On echocardiography, the ratio of E to A transmitral flow velocities (an indicator of diastolic function) was 1.8 ± 0.1 in ob/ob mice and 2.5 ± 0.1 in ob/+ mice (P = 0.0001). In contrast, the indexes of systolic function and heart brain natriuretic peptide mRNA expression were only marginally affected and unaffected, respectively, in ob/ob compared with ob/+ mice. The results suggest that ob/ob mouse hearts have increased expression of cardiac gene products that stimulate myocyte fatty acid uptake and triglyceride storage and accumulate neutral lipids within the cardiac myocytes. The results also suggest that the cardiac lipid accumulation is paralleled by cardiac diastolic dysfunction in ob/ob mice.
Oxford University Press