Intracellular Ca2+ overload and increased diastolic stiffness are caused by the accumulation of sugar phosphates rather than by the inhibition of glycolysis per se.
Diastolic dysfunction and intracellular calcium overload induced by glycolytic inhibition are caused by the accumulation of sugar phosphates rather than the depletion of glycolytically derived ATP.
Effect estimate: r = 0.86
p-value: p=< 0.01
Several lines of evidence indicate that glycolysis is especially important for normal diastolic relaxation and for the maintenance of cellular ion homeostasis in myocardium. To elucidate whether the glycolytic flux of ATP contributes to diastolic tone and to the regulation of intracellular Ca2+, myocardial content of sugar phosphates (SP) and intracellular Ca2+ concentration (Ca2+i) were measured in isolated, perfused ferret hearts using nuclear magnetic resonance. Glucose and acetate were used as substrates for glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation, respectively. Glycogen was effectively depleted after 15-min perfusion with glucagon (2 mg/liter), as verified by the lack of rise in SP during exposure to iodoacetate (100 microM) in substrate-free perfusate. Despite the fact that glycolytic flux had been blocked both by iodoacetate and by absence of substrate, end-diastolic left ventricular pressure (EDP) remained unchanged (P > 0.15, n = 6). The subsequent addition of glucose to the perfusate led to SP accumulation and a marked rise in EDP, with a significant correlation between EDP and SP (r = 0.86 +/- 0.04, P < 0.01, n = 6). A similar correlation was observed when glucose in the perfusate was replaced by 2-deoxyglucose (r = 0.78 +/- 0.09, P < 0.01, n = 3). Fluorine nuclear magnetic resonance measurements of Ca2+i verified that EDP faithfully reports changes in diastolic Ca2+i under the present experimental conditions. Thus, intracellular Ca2+ overload is caused by the accumulation of SP rather than by the inhibition of glycolysis per se. Glycolysis may appear to be important because its by-products are deleterious, and not necessarily because glycolytically derived ATP plays a favored role in ion homeostasis.
Kusuoka et al. (Tue,) conducted a other in Diastolic dysfunction. Glycolytic inhibition (iodoacetate or 2-deoxyglucose) with glucose vs. Substrate-free perfusate or acetate was evaluated on Correlation between end-diastolic left ventricular pressure (EDP) and sugar phosphate (SP) accumulation (r = 0.86, p=< 0.01). Intracellular Ca2+ overload and increased diastolic stiffness are caused by the accumulation of sugar phosphates rather than by the inhibition of glycolysis per se.