학술논문

Altered Cardiac Energetics and Mitochondrial Dysfunction in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
Document Type
article
Source
Circulation. 144(21)
Subject
Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Heart Disease
Cardiovascular
Genetics
Nutrition
Aetiology
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Adult
Aged
Cardiomyopathy
Hypertrophic
Cell Respiration
Computational Biology
Disease Management
Disease Susceptibility
Energy Metabolism
Female
Gene Expression Profiling
Heart Function Tests
Humans
Lipidomics
Male
Metabolome
Metabolomics
Middle Aged
Mitochondria
Mutation
Oxidative Stress
Reactive Oxygen Species
Transcriptome
cardiomyopathy
hypertrophic
metabolism
mitochondria
mitophagy
reactive oxygen species
cardiomyopathy
hypertrophic
Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology
Clinical Sciences
Public Health and Health Services
Cardiovascular System & Hematology
Cardiovascular medicine and haematology
Clinical sciences
Sports science and exercise
Language
Abstract
BackgroundHypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a complex disease partly explained by the effects of individual gene variants on sarcomeric protein biomechanics. At the cellular level, HCM mutations most commonly enhance force production, leading to higher energy demands. Despite significant advances in elucidating sarcomeric structure-function relationships, there is still much to be learned about the mechanisms that link altered cardiac energetics to HCM phenotypes. In this work, we test the hypothesis that changes in cardiac energetics represent a common pathophysiologic pathway in HCM.MethodsWe performed a comprehensive multiomics profile of the molecular (transcripts, metabolites, and complex lipids), ultrastructural, and functional components of HCM energetics using myocardial samples from 27 HCM patients and 13 normal controls (donor hearts).ResultsIntegrated omics analysis revealed alterations in a wide array of biochemical pathways with major dysregulation in fatty acid metabolism, reduction of acylcarnitines, and accumulation of free fatty acids. HCM hearts showed evidence of global energetic decompensation manifested by a decrease in high energy phosphate metabolites (ATP, ADP, and phosphocreatine) and a reduction in mitochondrial genes involved in creatine kinase and ATP synthesis. Accompanying these metabolic derangements, electron microscopy showed an increased fraction of severely damaged mitochondria with reduced cristae density, coinciding with reduced citrate synthase activity and mitochondrial oxidative respiration. These mitochondrial abnormalities were associated with elevated reactive oxygen species and reduced antioxidant defenses. However, despite significant mitochondrial injury, HCM hearts failed to upregulate mitophagic clearance.ConclusionsOverall, our findings suggest that perturbed metabolic signaling and mitochondrial dysfunction are common pathogenic mechanisms in patients with HCM. These results highlight potential new drug targets for attenuation of the clinical disease through improving metabolic function and reducing mitochondrial injury.