학술논문

Enhanced Cardiac Akt/Protein Kinase B Signaling Contributes to Pathological Cardiac Hypertrophy in Part by Impairing Mitochondrial Function via Transcriptional Repression of Mitochondrion-Targeted Nuclear Genes
Document Type
article
Source
Molecular and Cellular Biology. 35(5)
Subject
Prevention
Heart Disease
Cardiovascular
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Adenosine Triphosphate
Animals
Cardiomegaly
Cell Nucleus
Fatty Acids
Female
Gene Expression Profiling
Gene Expression Regulation
Glycolysis
Heart
Hemodynamics
Hypertrophy
Male
Mice
Mitochondria
Muscle Cells
Oxygen
PPAR alpha
Proteomics
Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt
Signal Transduction
Transcription
Genetic
Transgenes
Biological Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Developmental Biology
Language
Abstract
Sustained Akt activation induces cardiac hypertrophy (LVH), which may lead to heart failure. This study tested the hypothesis that Akt activation contributes to mitochondrial dysfunction in pathological LVH. Akt activation induced LVH and progressive repression of mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation (FAO) pathways. Preventing LVH by inhibiting mTOR failed to prevent the decline in mitochondrial function, but glucose utilization was maintained. Akt activation represses expression of mitochondrial regulatory, FAO, and oxidative phosphorylation genes in vivo that correlate with the duration of Akt activation in part by reducing FOXO-mediated transcriptional activation of mitochondrion-targeted nuclear genes in concert with reduced signaling via peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor α (PPARα)/PGC-1α and other transcriptional regulators. In cultured myocytes, Akt activation disrupted mitochondrial bioenergetics, which could be partially reversed by maintaining nuclear FOXO but not by increasing PGC-1α. Thus, although short-term Akt activation may be cardioprotective during ischemia by reducing mitochondrial metabolism and increasing glycolysis, long-term Akt activation in the adult heart contributes to pathological LVH in part by reducing mitochondrial oxidative capacity.