Diabetes-induced cardiomyocyte passive stiffening is caused by impaired insulin-dependent titin modification and can be modulated by neuregulin-1

AE Hopf, C Andresen, S Kötter, M Isić, K Ulrich… - Circulation …, 2018 - Am Heart Assoc
AE Hopf, C Andresen, S Kötter, M Isić, K Ulrich, S Sahin, S Bongardt, W Röll, F Drove…
Circulation Research, 2018Am Heart Assoc
Rationale: Increased titin-dependent cardiomyocyte tension is a hallmark of heart failure
with preserved ejection fraction associated with type-2 diabetes mellitus. However, the
insulin-related signaling pathways that modify titin-based cardiomyocyte tension, thereby
contributing to modulation of diastolic function, are largely unknown. Objective: We aimed to
determine how impaired insulin signaling affects titin expression and phosphorylation and
thus increases passive cardiomyocyte tension, and whether metformin or neuregulin-1 …
Rationale:
Increased titin-dependent cardiomyocyte tension is a hallmark of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction associated with type-2 diabetes mellitus. However, the insulin-related signaling pathways that modify titin-based cardiomyocyte tension, thereby contributing to modulation of diastolic function, are largely unknown.
Objective:
We aimed to determine how impaired insulin signaling affects titin expression and phosphorylation and thus increases passive cardiomyocyte tension, and whether metformin or neuregulin-1 (NRG-1) can correct disturbed titin modifications and increased titin-based stiffness.
Methods and Results:
We used cardiac biopsies from human diabetic (n=23) and nondiabetic patients (n=19), cultured rat cardiomyocytes, left ventricular tissue from apolipoprotein E–deficient mice with streptozotocin-induced diabetes mellitus (n=12–22), and ZSF1 (obese diabetic Zucker fatty/spontaneously hypertensive heart failure F1 hybrid) rats (n=5–6) and analyzed insulin-dependent signaling pathways that modulate titin phosphorylation. Titin-based passive tension was measured using permeabilized cardiomyocytes. In human diabetic hearts, we detected titin hypophosphorylation at S4099 and hyperphosphorylation at S11878, suggesting altered activity of protein kinases; cardiomyocyte passive tension was significantly increased. When applied to cultured cardiomyocytes, insulin and metformin increased titin phosphorylation at S4010, S4099, and S11878 via enhanced ERK1/2 (extracellular signal regulated kinase 1/2) and PKCα (protein kinase Cα) activity; NRG-1 application enhanced ERK1/2 activity but reduced PKCα activity. In apolipoprotein E–deficient mice, chronic treatment of streptozotocin-induced diabetes mellitus with NRG-1 corrected titin phosphorylation via increased PKG (protein kinase G) and ERK1/2 activity and reduced PKCα activity, which reversed the diabetes mellitus–associated changes in titin-based passive tension. Acute application of NRG-1 to obese ZSF1 rats with type-2 diabetes mellitus reduced end-diastolic pressure.
Conclusions:
Mechanistically, we found that impaired cGMP–PKG signaling and elevated PKCα activity are key modulators of titin-based cardiomyocyte stiffening in diabetic hearts. We conclude that by restoring normal kinase activities of PKG, ERK1/2, and PKCα, and by reducing cardiomyocyte passive tension, chronic NRG-1 application is a promising approach to modulate titin properties in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction associated with type-2 diabetes mellitus.
Am Heart Assoc