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Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 292: C1880-C1886, 2007. First published January 17, 2007; doi:10.1152/ajpcell.00576.2006
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CELLULAR METABOLISM

Recruitment of NADH shuttling in pressure-overloaded and hypertrophic rat hearts

E. Douglas Lewandowski,1,2 J. Michael O'Donnell,1,2 Thomas D. Scholz,3 Natalia Sorokina,1,2 and Peter M. Buttrick2

1Program in Integrative Cardiac Metabolism, 2Center for Cardiovascular Research, University of Illinois, College of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois; and 3Department of Pediatrics, University of Iowa, College of Medicine, Iowa City, Iowa

Submitted 15 November 2006 ; accepted in final form 11 January 2007

Glucose metabolism in the heart requires oxidation of cytosolic NADH from glycolysis. This study examines shuttling reducing equivalents from the cytosol to the mitochondria via the activity and expression of the oxoglutarate-malate carrier (OMC) in rat hearts subjected to 2 wk (Hyp2, n = 6) and 10 wk (Hyp10, n = 8) of pressure overload hypertrophy vs. that of sham-operated rats (Sham2, n = 6; and Sham10, n = 7). Moderate aortic banding produced increased atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) mRNA expression at 2 and 10 wk, but only at 10 wk did hearts develop compensatory hypertrophy (33% increase, P < 0.05). Isolated hearts were perfused with the short-chain fatty acid [2,4-13C2]butyrate (2 mM) and glucose (5 mM) to enable dynamic-mode 13C NMR of intermediate exchange across OMC. OMC flux increased before the development of hypertrophy: Hyp2 = 9.6 ± 2.1 vs. Sham2 = 3.7 ± 1.2 µM·min–1·g dry wt–1, providing an increased contribution of cytosolic NADH to energy synthesis in the mitochondria. With compensatory hypertrophy, OMC flux returned to normal: Hyp10 = 3.9 ± 1.7 vs. Sham10 = 3.8 ± 1.2 µM·g–1·min–1. Despite changes in activity, no differences in OMC expression occurred between Hyp and Sham groups. Elevated OMC flux represented augmented cytosolic NADH shuttling, coupled to increased nonoxidative glycolysis, in response to hypertrophic stimulus. However, development of compensatory hypertrophy moderated the pressure-induced elevation in OMC flux, which returned to control levels. The findings indicate that the challenge of pressure overload increases cytosolic redox state and its contribution to mitochondrial oxidation but that hypertrophy, before decompensation, alleviates this stress response.

malate-aspartate shuttle; redox state; hypertrophy



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: E. D. Lewandowski, Program in Integrative Cardiac Metabolism, 835 S. Wolcott Ave., MC901, Univ. of Illinois, College of Medicine, Chicago, IL 60612 (e-mail: dougl{at}uic.edu)




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