The Failing Heart Relies on Ketone Bodies as a Fuel

Gregory Aubert, Ola J. Martin, Julie L. Horton, Ling Lai, Rick B. Vega, Teresa C. Leone, Timothy Koves, Stephen J. Gardell, Marcus Krüger, Charles L. Hoppel, E. Douglas Lewandowski, Peter A. Crawford, Deborah M. Muoio, Daniel P. Kelly

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

503 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background-Significant evidence indicates that the failing heart is energy starved. During the development of heart failure, the capacity of the heart to utilize fatty acids, the chief fuel, is diminished. Identification of alternate pathways for myocardial fuel oxidation could unveil novel strategies to treat heart failure. Methods and Results-Quantitative mitochondrial proteomics was used to identify energy metabolic derangements that occur during the development of cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure in well-defined mouse models. As expected, the amounts of proteins involved in fatty acid utilization were downregulated in myocardial samples from the failing heart. Conversely, expression of β-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase 1, a key enzyme in the ketone oxidation pathway, was increased in the heart failure samples. Studies of relative oxidation in an isolated heart preparation using ex vivo nuclear magnetic resonance combined with targeted quantitative myocardial metabolomic profiling using mass spectrometry revealed that the hypertrophied and failing heart shifts to oxidizing ketone bodies as a fuel source in the context of reduced capacity to oxidize fatty acids. Distinct myocardial metabolomic signatures of ketone oxidation were identified. Conclusions-These results indicate that the hypertrophied and failing heart shifts to ketone bodies as a significant fuel source for oxidative ATP production. Specific metabolite biosignatures of in vivo cardiac ketone utilization were identified. Future studies aimed at determining whether this fuel shift is adaptive or maladaptive could unveil new therapeutic strategies for heart failure.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)698-705
Number of pages8
JournalCirculation
Volume133
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 23 2016

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 American Heart Association, Inc.

Keywords

  • fatty acids
  • heart failure
  • hypertrophy
  • metabolism
  • molecular biology

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