(Circulation. 2002;105:1727.)
© 2002 American Heart Association, Inc.
Current Perspective |
From the Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Cardiology, University of Texas-Houston Medical School, Houston, Tex (H.T., M.E.Y.), and the Cardiology Section, Penn State University College of Medicine, the Milton S. Hershey Medical Center, Hershey, Pa (P.M).
Correspondence to Heinrich Taegtmeyer, MD, DPhil, Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Cardiology, University of Texas-Houston Medical School, 6431 Fannin, MSB 1.246, Houston, TX 77030. E-mail Heinrich.Taegtmeyer{at}uth.tmc.edu
Key Words: diabetes mellitus heart failure cardiovascular diseases
| Introduction |
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The difficulties in making a causal connection between diabetes and heart failure are formidable. Some simple definitions remain elusive. For example, the distinction between the insulin-deficient (type 1) and insulin-resistant (type 2) forms of diabetes on the one hand, and the distinction between systolic and diastolic dysfunction as causes of heart failure, on the other hand, are hard to define. The known trophic and hemodynamic effects of insulin in healthy individuals,6 the well-described endothelial dysfunction, the deposition of advanced glycation end products, and an accelerated progression of atherosclerosis in patients with diabetes add further complexities to the clinical picture of heart failure in diabetes. Nonetheless, diabetes as a primary cause for heart failure was already recognized more than a century ago, when heart failure was regarded a "frequent and noteworthy complication of diabetes mellitus,"7 and physicians proposed already then that "heart disease in diabetes can be traced to an abnormality in metabolism."8
Hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia increase the risk of fatal cardiovascular disease in the form of premature and accelerated coronary artery disease.911 The increased prevalence of coronary artery disease in diabetes is associated with a constellation of risk factors that has long been appreciated.12,13 We have speculated that insulin resistance and coronary artery disease may have a common root.14 Patients with type 2 diabetes are frequently obese, and often suffer from hypertension and exhibit dyslipidemia (high serum triglyceride and high VLDV and LDL, as well as low HDL cholesterol levels).9 Because angina is not always a reliable index of ischemia in patients with coronary artery disease,15,16 ischemia often goes undetected and contributes significantly to heart failure.
A number of clinical and experimental studies suggest that diabetes results in functional, biochemical, and morphological abnormalities independent of myocardial ischemia. Early studies on substrate metabolism of the human heart have revealed that glucose uptake is decreased, whereas fatty acid uptake is increased by the heart of patients with diabetes.17 In light of an abundance of substrate supply in the blood and impaired contractile function of the myocardium, it is appropriate to ask the question, "Why does the heart fail in the midst of plenty?" In the first part of our review, we will discuss the effects of diabetes on energy substrate metabolism and contractile function of the heart. In the second part, we will focus on potential molecular mechanisms by which energy substrate metabolism and gene expression interact during adaptation and maladaptation of the heart to diabetes.
| Functional Adaptation and Maladaptation of the Heart in Diabetes |
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First, patients with diabetes exhibit changes in cardiac structure and cardiomyocyte ultrastructure that can plausibly be attributed to the diabetic milieu. On the macroscopic level, echocardiographic screening of large databases has demonstrated that diabetes is associated with concentric left ventricular hypertrophy and increased heart mass, with mildly reduced left ventricular systolic performance.22 On the microscopic level, histological studies of autopsy and biopsy specimens demonstrate that diabetic humans and animals made diabetic share a constellation of cardiac morphological abnormalities, including myocyte hypertrophy, perivascular fibrosis, and increased quantities of matrix collagen, cellular triglyceride, and cell membrane lipid. All of these findings are consistent with the nonenzymatic glycation of vascular and membrane proteins, increased cellular fatty acid uptake, and hyperglycemia-induced oxidative stress, which are characteristic of the diabetes state.23,24
These morphological changes, especially when considered together with the changes in myocardial calcium metabolism and contractile protein composition observed in experimental diabetes, would be predicted to confer clinically significant impairment in diastolic compliance. Doppler echocardiographic studies have revealed that qualitatively similar patterns of diastolic dysfunction are an early feature of diabetes in both animal models25 and humans.26,27 In patients with diabetes, the reduction of diastolic compliance is associated with characteristically abnormal myocardial acoustic properties and correlates positively with the severity and duration of diabetes and negatively with the ability to perform treadmill exercise.28 The relevance of this type of diastolic dysfunction to diabetes per se is clouded by the frequent coexistence of hypertension with diabetes; however, the recognition that impaired left ventricular diastolic filling can be demonstrated very early in the course of monogenetic type-2 diabetes in animal models, before the onset of hypertension, vasculopathy, or even fasting hyperglycemia, suggests diastolic dysfunction is an effect of diabetes itself.25 An association of diabetes with myocardial diastolic dysfunction and poor exercise performance is undisputed.
There is less evidence that diabetes itself can cause left ventricular dilatation and failure in the absence of coronary artery disease or hypertension. Nevertheless, because of the coexistence of diabetes, hypertension, and coronary artery disease, these factors may act synergistically to produce heart failure on the basis of left ventricular systolic dysfunction. For this reason, it is difficult to target a diabetes-specific metabolic, functional, or structural abnormality for pharmacological treatment of heart failure in diabetes. Furthermore, it still remains to be seen whether the degree of metabolic control affects the function of the heart in diabetes. The focus therefore shifts once more to the identification and treatment of comorbidities in diabetes.
| Comorbidities in Diabetes |
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Synergy between diabetes and hypertension may be an even more important issue. The 2 conditions are associated with qualitatively similar changes in cardiac ultrastructure, gene expression, and diastolic function, and evidence from both animal34 and human35,36 studies suggest that their effects are independent and synergistic. At the cellular level, both diabetes and hypertension have been associated with an induction of cardiomyocyte apoptosis and necrosis in the human heart mediated by oxidative stress resulting from local production of angiotensin-II by the cardiac renin-angiotensin system (RAS).36 Because hypertension activates both cardiac and systemic RAS, whereas hyperglycemia promotes the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) as a reaction product of protein glycation, hypertension and diabetes might synergistically promote apoptotic cardiomyocyte loss. In patients with diabetes, the development of hypertension can then be expected to initiate the transition from compensated/hypertrophied to decompensated/dilated cardiomyopathy. This hypothesis is supported by recent clinical trials demonstrating that tight blood pressure control dramatically reduces the incidence of heart failure and cardiovascular mortality in patients with established diabetes.37,38
Lastly, one of the most important comorbidities is diabetic nephropathy, which shares certain features with small vessel disease in the retina.39 A discussion of this topic would be beyond the scope of this review.
| Substrate Selection and Insulin Action in Heart and Skeletal Muscle |
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Glucose uptake by muscle (cardiac and skeletal muscle) is determined primarily by 2 separate but interrelated factors, namely the local concentrations of insulin and the intensity of exercise/contraction. Furthermore, nonesterified fatty acids (NEFAs) modulate insulin-mediated glucose transport. Figure 2 integrates well-known and more recently described mechanisms by which fatty acids regulate glucose metabolism in the heart. Earlier, it was shown that fatty acids inhibit glucose oxidation to a greater extent than glycolysis, and glycolysis to a greater extent than glucose uptake by the heart.42 Later, we have shown the reverse is true as well; glucose suppresses the oxidation of long-chain fatty acids,43 potentially through malonyl-CoA inhibition of carnitine palmitoyltransferase I.44 These observations expose a complex and highly regulated interaction of substrates for provision of the optimal fuel for respiration in a given environment.
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Insulin secretion into the bloodstream (or insulin administration) increases muscle glucose uptake by 2 major mechanisms. Insulin directly stimulates myocyte glucose uptake by increasing glucose transporter (GLUT) 4 translocation to the cell surface. In addition, insulin inhibits release of NEFA from adipose tissue, thus lowering plasma NEFA levels and therefore removing NEFA-mediated inhibition of glycolysis and pyruvate oxidation (as well as the inhibitory effect of NEFA on insulin signaling). The magnitude of glucose consumption observed at any particular insulin level in vivo will thus be reduced to the extent that other conditions (eg, fasting, catecholamine release, or heparin administration) concomitantly raise circulating NEFA levels. This principle of glucose-NEFA substrate competition is so striking that early investigators incorrectly assumed type 2 diabetes was secondary to chronic elevation in plasma NEFA levels alone.41 The suppression of glucose oxidation by fatty acids, however, is only one component of a complex system of metabolic interactions.
Fatty acids undoubtedly impair insulin-mediated glucose disposal (Figure 2). High-fat feeding has repeatedly and consistently been shown to result in impaired glucose tolerance and decreased muscle insulin sensitivity.4547 The exact mechanism by which fatty acids inhibit insulin action are not known, but recent studies suggest a role of various isoforms of protein kinase C (PKC), especially PKCs
and
.4850 Discordance between the rates of fatty acid availability and/or uptake with that of fatty acid oxidation results in increased intracellular long chain fatty acyl-CoA concentrations. The latter, either directly or through increased generation of diacylglycerol (DAG), activates PKCs.48 PKCs are serine/threonine kinases capable of causing the phosphorylation of the insulin receptor and/or the insulin receptor substrates, either directly or through activation of additional kinases (eg, MAP kinase), thereby preventing insulin-mediated tyrosine phosphorylation and impairing insulin action.51,52 Increased intramuscular fatty acids and increased PKC activity have been reported in insulin resistant skeletal muscle.49,50,53 Recent studies suggest that fatty acids also inhibit insulin signaling at the level of PKB, possibly via ceramide.54 Taken together, normal insulin response is a prerequisite for balanced fuel provision to the heart.
| Glycolysis and Substrate Competition |
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The myocardial adaptation to energetic stress also includes recruitment of specific elements of the intrinsic cardiac insulin-response system. Insulin, ischemia, and stimulation of the
1 adrenergic receptor induce sarcolemmal GLUT4 translocation by mechanisms operating through PI 3-kinase and AMP kinase, in rat58,59 and dog60 heart (Figure 3). The potential importance of ischemic GLUT4 translocation is illustrated by the demonstration that cardiac-specific GLUT4 knockout impairs postischemic contractile recovery of the mouse heart under certain conditions.61
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The oxidation of pyruvate is limited by the rate at which pyruvate is converted to acetyl-CoA by the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC) in mitochondria. Because glucose oxidation requires less oxygen per mole of ATP formed than NEFA oxidation, myocardial PDC activity correlates, not unexpectedly, with contractile performance in the postischemic heart. Here, both PDC activity and contractility are depressed in tandem at the onset of reperfusion after an episode of ischemia62,63 and administration of either pharmacological activators of PDC (eg, dichloroacetate),64 or ranolazine,65 or supplemental pyruvate66 increases not only the relative contribution of glucose to the Krebs cycle substrate pool but also cardiac power.
| Insulin Signaling and Insulin Resistance |
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15% of total cardiomyocyte GLUT4 protein can be isolated from the sarcolemma, whereas this amount increases to
80% within 30 minutes of insulin administration. Studies using specific inhibitors have revealed that the action of 4 protein kinases (phosphoinositol 3-kinase [PI 3-K], Akt/protein kinase B [PKB], and the atypical protein kinase C [aPKC] isoforms zeta and
) are required for insulin-dependent sarcolemmal GLUT4 translocation.67,70,71 Although specific defects in the muscle insulin receptor, insulin receptor substrates, PI 3-K, PKB, or aPKC would seem logical candidates for the inherited nature of muscle insulin resistance, isolated defects in these individual elements in fact account for only sporadic cases of diabetes.72 In spite of this wealth of information, the specific defect in insulin-stimulated GLUT4 translocation, which conveys muscle insulin resistance, remains obscure. Identification of novel branches of the insulin-signaling cascade,73 and how factors such as fatty acids interact with components involved in insulin-mediated glucose transport,68 will undoubtedly shed light on the complex genetic-environment interactions involved in the development of insulin resistance. | Myocardial Metabolism in Diabetes |
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Because diabetes more than doubles the chance of developing congestive heart failure in patients with a variety of cardiovascular diseases,32,33 it has been speculated that acute77 and chronic metabolic alterations may impair the energetic and functional adaptation of the heart to ischemia or hemodynamic overload. For example, administering the islet toxin streptozotocin to rats produces insulin-deficient diabetes, reduces myocardial expression of GLUT4 and hexokinase,78 induces fetal isoforms of sarcomeric proteins,79 decreases sarcoendoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase 2a transcript levels,79 and reduces myocardial PDC activity.80 Such hearts exhibit reduced rates of glycolysis and pyruvate oxidation, preceding depressed contractility; administering the PDC agonist dichloroacetate coordinately normalizes glucose oxidation and contractility.80 Later, we have also argued that impaired energy metabolism of the heart in diabetes may be traced to a substrate-induced inhibition of the Krebs cycle.77
The effects of type 2 diabetes on myocardial energy metabolism are complex, because circulating levels of insulin, glucose, and NEFA are usually increased in this condition. Until recently, it has been assumed that the interactions of glucose and fatty acids proposed by Randle et al42 account for the correlation of lipids and reduced insulin sensitivity. There are now, however, several lines of evidence to suggest that elevated tissue lipid availability activates pathways that lead to the attenuation of insulin signals and impaired glucose uptake in diabetic muscle (Figure 2).68,81 Logic suggests one factor influencing the hearts adaptation to energetic stress in NIDDM would be the integrity of the cardiac insulin response system. As discussed above, in skeletal muscles of diabetic subjects, this system is functionally impaired because of genetic-environment interactions.8186 Although the impact of type 2 diabetes on the insulin response system of the myocardium is less well characterized, it may differ from the phenotype exhibited by the skeletal muscles. Studies using 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose PET to compare insulins effect on glucose uptake by heart and limb muscles in type 2 diabetic subjects have suggested preserved insulin responsiveness of the former in the face of insulin resistance in the latter.87 To the extent that the myocardium continues to express a competent insulin response system in type 2 diabetes, therapeutic augmentation of oxidative glucose metabolism might be useful strategies for increasing the energy reserves of the failing diabetic heart. Clinical data to support this approach are now emerging.88 It is important to emphasize that the above-mentioned studies refer to insulin responsiveness (ie, response of the heart to pharmacodynamic doses of insulin). To date, no studies have investigated insulin sensitivity (ie, response to physiological concentrations of insulin) in the human heart.
Although a variety of specific metabolic defects have been described in individuals or families with diabetes,72 studies by Shulman and colleagues,81,82 Rothman et al,83 and Cline et al84 using 31P and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to track glucose through its intracellular metabolic pathways in vivo have established that the insulin resistance of diabetic skeletal muscle is primarily due to impaired glucose transmembrane transport and phosphorylation. Healthy offspring of patients with diabetes already exhibit impaired insulin stimulation of skeletal muscle glucose uptake, suggesting the defect in glucose transport is genetically influenced.85 The existence of such a defect in heart muscle requires further exploration.
| Insulin Resistance: Cause and/or Consequence of Heart Failure |
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, on peripheral insulin sensitivity.9196 A vicious cycle is therefore set in motion, in which heart failure and insulin resistance worsen one another. If this cycle is not broken by treatment of the heart failure (eg, with ACE inhibitors) or insulin resistance (eg, with thiazolidinediones), either alone or in combination, heart and end-organ function will deteriorate. This hypothesis, however, still needs to be tested. | Summary and Outlook |
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| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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Guest Editor for this article was Gary D. Lopaschuk, MD, University of Alberta, Alberta, Canada.
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J. M. McGavock, S. Mandic, I. Vonder Muhll, R. Z. Lewanczuk, H. A. Quinney, D. A. Taylor, R. C. Welsh, and M. Haykowsky Low Cardiorespiratory Fitness Is Associated With Elevated C-Reactive Protein Levels in Women With Type 2 Diabetes Diabetes Care, February 1, 2004; 27(2): 320 - 325. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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B. F. Johnson, R. W. Nesto, M. A. Pfeifer, W. R. Slater, A. I. Vinik, D. A. Chyun, G. Law, F. J.Th. Wackers, and L. H. Young Cardiac Abnormalities in Diabetic Patients With Neuropathy: Effects of aldose reductase inhibitor administration Diabetes Care, February 1, 2004; 27(2): 448 - 454. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. Desrois, R. J Sidell, D. Gauguier, L. M King, G. K Radda, and K. Clarke Initial steps of insulin signaling and glucose transport are defective in the type 2 diabetic rat heart Cardiovasc Res, February 1, 2004; 61(2): 288 - 296. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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H. Taegtmeyer and P. Razeghi Heart disease in diabetes--resist the beginnings J. Am. Coll. Cardiol., January 21, 2004; 43(2): 315 - 315. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. Haffner and H. Taegtmeyer Epidemic Obesity and the Metabolic Syndrome Circulation, September 30, 2003; 108(13): 1541 - 1545. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. Scheuermann-Freestone, P. L. Madsen, D. Manners, A. M. Blamire, R. E. Buckingham, P. Styles, G. K. Radda, S. Neubauer, and K. Clarke Abnormal Cardiac and Skeletal Muscle Energy Metabolism in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes Circulation, June 24, 2003; 107(24): 3040 - 3046. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. Jessup and S. Brozena Heart Failure N. Engl. J. Med., May 15, 2003; 348(20): 2007 - 2018. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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C. J. Tack Insulin Resistance and Acute Cardiovascular Complications Seminars in Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia, March 1, 2003; 7(1): 85 - 90. [PDF] |
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M. Bartnik, K. Malmberg, and L. Ryden Diabetes and the heart: compromised myocardial function -- a common challenge Eur. Heart J. Suppl., January 1, 2003; 5(suppl_B): B33 - B41. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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