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Division of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada V6T 1Z3
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ABSTRACT |
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In streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rats, we previously showed an increased heparin-releasable (luminal) lipoprotein lipase (LPL) activity from perfused hearts. To study the effect of this enlarged LPL pool on triglyceride (TG)-rich lipoproteins, we examined the metabolism of very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL) perfused through control and diabetic hearts. Diabetic rats had elevated TG levels compared with control. However, fasting for 16 h abolished this difference. When the plasma lipoprotein fraction of density <1.006 g/ml from fasted control and diabetic rats was incubated in vitro with purified bovine or rat LPL, VLDL from diabetic animals was hydrolyzed as proficiently as VLDL from control animals. Post-heparin plasma lipolytic activity was comparable in control and diabetic animals. However, perfusion of control and diabetic rats with heparinase indicated that diabetic hearts had larger amounts of LPL bound to heparan sulfate proteoglycan-binding sites. [3H]VLDL obtained from control rats, when recirculated through the isolated heart, disappeared at a significantly faster rate from diabetic than from control rat hearts. This increased VLDL-TG hydrolysis was essentially abolished by prior perfusion of the diabetic heart with heparin, implicating LPL in this process. These findings suggest that the enlarged LPL pool in the diabetic heart is present at a functionally relevant location (at the capillary lumen) and is capable of hydrolyzing VLDL. This could increase the delivery of free fatty acid to the heart, and the resultant metabolic changes could induce the subsequent cardiomyopathy that is observed in the chronic diabetic rat.
lipoprotein lipase; diabetes; very-low-density lipoprotein
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INTRODUCTION |
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CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL studies have established that
chronic diabetes mellitus can negatively alter myocardial function independent of vascular defects (14, 33). Although several etiological
factors have been put forward to explain the development of diabetic
cardiomyopathy, increasing evidence suggests that alterations in fuel
supply and utilization by the heart may be the initiating factor for
the development of this cardiac dysfunction (31, 34). Under normal
aerobic conditions, cellular energy in the form of ATP is obtained via
the oxidation of various substrates, with free fatty acids (FFAs) being
the preferred energy substrate used by the heart muscle. In diabetes,
because of inadequate glucose transport and oxidation, energy
production in the heart is almost entirely via
+-oxidation of FFA, a
process that may have deleterious effects on myocardial function (31,
34).
Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) is an enzyme that is widely distributed in a variety of tissues (4, 11). In the adult heart, LPL is produced in myocytes, and the active dimeric enzyme is then translocated onto heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG)-binding sites on the luminal surface of the capillary endothelium (5, 24). At this location, "functional" LPL plays a crucial role in the hydrolysis of triglyceride (TG)-rich lipoproteins [chylomicrons and very-low-density lipoprotein (VLDL)] to FFAs that are transported to the heart and used for energy production or the resynthesis of TG.
LPL localized at the capillary lumen is more sensitive to altered physiological and pathological states than is the total cellular pool (10, 40). Using conventional Langendorff retrograde perfusion of the heart with heparin, we reported significantly elevated LPL activity in streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rats after 2 or 12 wk of hypoinsulinemia (30). Inasmuch as heparin has been demonstrated to cross the endothelial barrier (20), we were uncertain as to whether this augmented LPL was bound exclusively to the luminal side of the capillary endothelium or was released from the abluminal surface, the interstitial space, and the myocyte cell surface. Recently, using a modified Langendorff isolated perfused heart (that separates the coronary from the interstitial effluent), we reported that the augmented LPL in the diabetic heart most likely represented the pool of enzyme at the coronary lumen, exclusive of the abluminal, interstitial, and myocyte pools (38). In all the above-mentioned studies (30, 38), LPL activity (determined by the in vitro hydrolysis of a synthetic substrate, triolein) and mass were measured subsequent to the release by heparin. However, HSPG-bound LPL exhibits a disparate rate of lipolysis compared with conventional lipolysis assays with LPL in solution (9). Hence, the present study was designed to investigate whether this enlarged LPL pool in the diabetic heart is metabolically relevant with regard to its efficiency in hydrolyzing native lipoproteins and, thereby, providing potentially toxic FFA to the heart.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Experimental animals. All animals were cared for in accordance with the principles promulgated by the Canadian Council on Animal Care and The University of British Columbia. Male Wistar rats (280-290 g) were obtained from The University of British Columbia Animal Care Unit (Vancouver, BC). The rats were maintained under a 12:12-h light-dark cycle (lights on from 7 AM to 7 PM) and supplied with a standard laboratory chow diet (PMI Feeds) and water ad libitum.
Induction of diabetes.
Selective
-cell death and the ensuing diabetic state can be produced
after a single intravenous dose of STZ (35). A dose-dependent increase
in severity of diabetes is produced by 25-100 mg/kg STZ. After an
injection of STZ (55 mg/kg iv), stable hyperglycemia develops within
24-48 h and remains two to three times higher than normal, in
concert with a ~50% reduction in plasma insulin levels. Although
these animals are insulin deficient, they do not require insulin
supplementation for survival and do not develop ketoacidosis. Rats were
randomly divided into nondiabetic (control) and diabetic groups.
Halothane-anesthetized rats were injected with STZ (55 mg/kg iv; Sigma
Chemical) or an equivalent volume (1 ml/kg) of saline. Glycosuria was
determined 24 h after STZ injection, and hyperglycemia was tested at 48 h via glucometer. All STZ-treated rats displayed glycosuria (
4) and
hyperglycemia (>13 mmol/l). Diabetic rats were kept for 2 wk after
the STZ injection, at which time they were euthanized and the hearts
were removed.
Release of HSPG-bound LPL with heparinase. To reinforce our recent observation that the increase in cardiac LPL in the diabetic heart occurs specifically at its HSPG-binding site in the capillary lumen (38), control and diabetic hearts were perfused with heparinase to hydrolyze HSPGs. In preliminary experiments, control hearts were perfused with various concentrations of recombinant heparinase III (IBEX Technologies, Montreal, PQ, Canada) to determine the optimal concentration and time required to detach LPL from its HSPG-binding sites. Subsequently, control and diabetic hearts were perfused in the recirculating mode with heparinase (10 U/ml), and LPL was determined in the coronary effluent collected over 30 min. Additionally, LPL release by heparinase was compared with that liberated by heparin. Control hearts were perfused retrogradely by the nonrecirculating Langendorff technique with heparin (5 U/ml) or heparinase (10 U/ml). The coronary effluent was collected in timed fractions (over 10 min) and frozen until assayed for LPL activity.
Separation of lipoproteins. Before removal of the heart, blood was withdrawn from the inferior vena cava. Serum was obtained after centrifugation at 3,000 g for 20 min and then used for isolation of major lipoproteins by density gradient ultracentrifugation (6, 28). Briefly, ultracentrifugation was carried out at 40,000 rpm (288,000 g) for 18 h at 15°C. Lipoprotein layers were removed using glass Pasteur pipettes, and the volume of each layer was measured. Different fractions were then measured for TG, cholesterol, and protein content. TG and cholesterol were measured enzymatically using Boehringer-Mannheim diagnostic kits, and protein was measured by the Bradford method (Bio-Rad). Isolation of VLDL without chylomicrons was achieved by using serum from 16-h fasted rats (6 PM-10 AM). Fasting of rats for this duration leads to the production of more VLDL and minimizes the contribution from chylomicrons (27).
Gel electrophoresis of VLDL.
Gradient polyacrylamide gel (4-20% Ready gel, Bio-Rad)
electrophoresis was performed to identify such major apolipoproteins as
apolipoproteins B, A I, E, and C II. VLDL samples were solublized and
reduced in SDS sample buffer (5% SDS, 20% glycerol, 1%
-mercaptoethanol, and 0.5% bromophenol blue in 0.5 M Tris, pH 6.8)
and boiled for 4 min at 95°C. Molecular weight standards were
diluted (1:20) with sample dilution buffer, and 10 µl were loaded
into the wells. Twenty-five microliters of VLDL sample (3.2 mg/ml) were
also loaded, and electrophoresis was run at 40 mA/gel. Gels were
stained with Coomassie brilliant blue R-250 and destained.
Apolipoproteins were identified on the basis of their molecular weights
by comparison to molecular weight standards and quantified by densitometry.
In vitro lipolysis of VLDL by bovine and rat LPL. In vitro lipolysis of VLDL-TG was carried out on the basis of previously described methods (12, 37). Briefly, VLDL was isolated from control rat serum. To determine the optimal incubation conditions to study lipolysis of VLDL by LPL, TG in control VLDL was adjusted to various concentrations (0.05-0.35 mM) and incubated with bovine LPL (bLPL; 20-100 mU; Sigma Chemical) at 37°C for 30 min. VLDL and bLPL stock solutions were diluted with Tris buffer (pH 8.1) containing 0.5% essentially FFA-free BSA. At the end of incubation, the reaction was stopped by addition of precooled 0.3 M Na2PO4 (pH 6.9), and the tubes were immediately immersed in ice. From this reaction mixture, 50 µl were pipetted in triplicate to measure FFA released by hydrolysis of VLDL-TG with an NEFA-C kit (Wako Chemicals). The results were corrected for background with an unreacted blank containing various concentrations of VLDL-TG and an equivalent volume of BSA containing Tris buffer instead of bLPL. From these experiments, it was determined that 0.3 mM VLDL-TG was a saturable concentration of substrate when incubated with 20 mU of bLPL (data not shown).
By use of the conditions described above, control and diabetic VLDL were adjusted to 0.3 mM TG, and lipolysis was carried out using 20 mU of bLPL for 180 min. Some VLDL lipolysis was also performed with rat LPL (rLPL) purified from control and diabetic post-heparin plasma. Post-heparin (0.5 U/g) plasma was collected at 5 min, and purification of rLPL was carried out by means of heparin-Sepharose affinity chromatography (16) with use of a HiTrap column (Pharmacia) and fast-protein liquid chromatography (Pharmacia). The purified rLPL from control and diabetic animals was adjusted to 20 mU/ml before incubation with lipoproteins.In vivo radiolabeling of VLDL. VLDL-TG was labeled in vivo with [3H]oleic acid by a previously described method (27). [3H]oleic acid was complexed to BSA as follows: 20 µl (100 µCi) of [3H]oleic acid were mixed with 200 µl of 10% NaHCO3, and 25% BSA in distilled water was then added to produce an albumin-fatty acid complex (23). The [3H]oleic acid-BSA complex was then injected intravenously (via the tail vein) into anesthetized control rats that were fasted for 16 h (6 PM-10 AM). At 40 min after injection of [3H]oleic acid, rats were euthanized, blood was withdrawn from the inferior vena cava, and serum was subjected to ultracentrifugation to isolate [3H]VLDL. Incorporation of the radiolabel into VLDL-TG was confirmed by TLC analysis on the chloroform-methanol extract (2:1, vol/vol) with silica gel G plates and hexane-diethyl ether-methanol-acetic acid (90:20:3:2, vol/vol/vol/vol) solvent system. The spot corresponding to standard triolein (Sigma Chemical) was scraped off, counted for radioactivity, and compared with an equivalent volume of chloroform-methanol extract of VLDL. More than 97% of the VLDL-lipoprotein radioactivity was found in the TG moiety. [3H]VLDL obtained from six rats was pooled to perfuse one heart.
Langendorff isolated heart perfusion. To quantitate the magnitude of lipoprotein hydrolysis, a Langendorff retrograde perfusion technique was used to perfuse control and diabetic hearts with radiolabeled VLDL. Rats were anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium (50 mg/kg ip), the thoracic cavity was opened, and the hearts were carefully excised. Rats were not injected with heparin before they were killed, because heparin displaces LPL bound to HSPGs on the capillary endothelium. Consequently, it was necessary to cannulate the heart quickly to avoid clotting in the coronary arteries. Immediately on excision, the beating heart was immersed in cold (4°C) Krebs-Ringer HEPES buffer (pH 7.4). The concentrations of solutes in the buffer were (in mmol/l) 1 CaCl2, 118 NaCl, 4.96 KCl, 1.19 KH2PO4, 1.19 MgSO4 · 7H2O, 24 HEPES, and 10 glucose. After the aorta was cannulated and tied below the innominate artery, the hearts were perfused retrogradely by the noncirculating Langendorff technique. At this time, most of the perfusate starts flowing through the pulmonary artery and drips down to the apex of the heart. The perfusion fluid was continuously gassed with 95% O2-5% CO2 in a double-walled, water-heated chamber maintained at 37°C with a temperature-controlled circulating water bath. A peristaltic pump controlled the rate of coronary flow (7-8 ml/min). To measure hydrolysis of VLDL, the perfusion solution was changed to Krebs buffer containing 1% BSA (fraction V, Boehringer-Mannheim) and [3H]VLDL.
Hydrolysis of VLDL by the isolated heart. Using the recirculating Langendorff retrograde perfusion (26), we compared the rate of TG-rich lipoprotein clearance in control and diabetic hearts. Twenty milliliters of Krebs-Henseleit perfusion buffer (pH 7.4) were prepared containing 0.3 mM [3H]VLDL-TG and 0.5% BSA. The perfusion apparatus was a specially designed closed recirculating system containing a double-jacketed reservoir, heart chamber, coil condenser, bubble trap, and injection port to collect samples of perfusate. This miniature system permitted the use of small perfusion volumes and diminished the loss of VLDL due to nonspecific attachment (<10%, appropriate corrections were made for this loss). After the heart was secured through the aorta, basic buffer was perfused for 3 min in a nonrecirculating mode to clear blood from the coronary blood vessels. Then buffer containing [3H]VLDL was perfused through control and diabetic hearts for 90 min at 5 ml/min in the recirculating mode. Samples were collected through the injection port from 0 (just before perfusion through the heart) to 90 min, placed on ice, and immediately extracted for TG (2). A decline in perfusate TG radioactivity was used as a measure of VLDL-TG clearance.
Post-heparin plasma lipolytic activity.
At 2 wk after STZ, plasma LPL activity in the basal (nonfasted) state
and in response to a heparin injection was determined in control and
diabetic rats. Heparin (0.5 U/g) was injected into the tail vein of
lightly anesthetized (pentobarbital sodium, 20 mg/kg ip) rats, and
blood samples were collected at 5 min. Plasma was separated and stored
at
70°C until assayed for LPL activity. Total lipase
(hepatic lipase + LPL) activity was determined by measuring the in
vitro hydrolysis of a sonicated [3H]triolein
substrate emulsion. The standard assay medium (400 µl) contained 0.6 mM glycerol tri[9,10-3H]oleate (1 mCi/mmol; 1 Ci = 37 GBq), 25 mM PIPES (pH 7.5), 0.05% (wt/vol) BSA, 50 mM
MgCl2, 10% (vol/vol) heat-inactivated chicken serum
(containing apolipoprotein C II), and 5 µl of plasma sample. The
release of [3H]oleate was measured after a
30-min incubation period at 30°C. The presence of hydrolyzed
[3H]oleate in the medium was determined by
addition of 3 ml of a fatty acid extraction solution (30) and 100 µl
of 0.1 M NaOH. After vortex mixing and centrifugation,
[3H]sodium oleate in 0.5 ml of the upper phase was
counted. In addition, hepatic lipase activity was measured by
incubating plasma with 1 M NaCl and conducting the assay in the
absence of apolipoprotein C II to suppress LPL activity (13). Plasma
LPL was calculated as the difference between total and hepatic lipase
activity and is expressed in milliunits, which corresponds to 1 nmol of
fatty acid released per minute. All LPL assays were performed in
duplicate in conditions where the reaction rate was linear with respect to time and the volume assayed.
Plasma measurements.
Blood samples from the tail vein were collected in heparinized glass
capillary tubes. Blood samples were immediately centrifuged, and plasma
was collected and stored at
20°C until it was assayed. Plasma glucose, TG, and cholesterol levels were measured with kits
(Boehringer-Mannheim). Plasma insulin was measured using a
double-antibody RIA kit (Linco Research, St. Louis, MO).
Materials. [3H]oleic acid and [3H]triolein were purchased from Amersham. Heparin sodium injection (Hapalean, 1,000 USP U/ml) was obtained from Oraganon Teknika. All other chemicals were obtained from Sigma Chemical.
Statistical analysis. Values are means ± SE unless otherwise stated. One-way ANOVA followed by the Newman-Keuls test or the unpaired Student's t-test was used to determine differences between group mean values. Changes in TG-rich lipoprotein clearance over time were analyzed with a multivariate ANOVA followed by the Newman-Keuls test with the Number Cruncher statistical system. The level of statistical significance was set at P < 0.05.
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RESULTS |
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General characteristics.
Induction of diabetes with STZ (55 mg/kg) resulted in glycosuria. Body
weight gain over 2 wk was reduced in diabetic animals relative to
controls. The STZ injection caused a reduction in plasma insulin levels
that was accompanied by hyperglycemia (Table 1).
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Plasma lipid profile and apolipoprotein analysis.
In fed control rats, 75% of total TG was present in the
VLDL/chylomicron fraction whereas the remaining 25% of TG was present in low- and high-density lipoprotein fractions. VLDL contributed the
least to the total cholesterol pool, which was present predominantly in
the high-density lipoprotein (61% of total cholesterol) and low-density lipoprotein (30%) fractions (data not shown). Figure 1 shows the distribution of TG
and cholesterol in the plasma lipoprotein fraction of density
<1.006 g/ml. TG and cholesterol levels were higher in diabetic than
in control animals. However, fasting for 16 h eliminated this increase
in TG (0.37 ± 0.04 and 0.35 ± 0.003 mmol/l in control and diabetic
animals, respectively), suggesting that diabetic hypertriglyceridemia
is largely a result of an increase in the concentration of
chylomicrons. Apolipoproteins in VLDL obtained from control and
diabetic rats were analyzed by gel electrophoresis. There was no
apparent difference (as measured by densitometry) in the apolipoprotein
profile of VLDLs isolated from the two groups (data not shown).
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Post-heparin plasma lipolytic activity.
Inasmuch as LPL is the rate-limiting enzyme in TG clearance, a decrease
or dysfunction in LPL activity often parallels a reduced catabolism of
TG-rich lipoproteins that results in hypertriglyceridemia. To test
whether the elevated plasma TG in diabetic rats result from a decrease
in LPL activity, basal (nonstimulated, nonfasted) and post-heparin
plasma was obtained from control and diabetic rats at 2 wk after
diabetes induction. Basal and post-heparin plasma LPL activity was not
adversely affected at 2 wk after diabetes induction (Fig.
2).
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Effect of heparinase treatment.
Retrograde perfusion of control hearts with heparin resulted in the
release of LPL into the coronary perfusate (Fig.
3, inset). The heparin-induced LPL
discharge was rapid, and peak activity, suggested to represent LPL
located at or near the endothelial surface, was observed within 2 min.
In contrast to the heparin discharge profile, release of LPL from
control hearts with heparinase was slow and protracted (Fig. 3,
inset). Comparison of the amount of LPL detached from
HSPG-binding sites on 30 min of perfusion with heparinase illustrated
that the amount of enzyme released from diabetic hearts was almost
twofold higher than from control hearts. Thus the majority of augmented
LPL in the diabetic heart is most likely bound to HSPGs.
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In vitro hydrolysis of VLDL by bLPL and rLPL.
Under our experimental conditions, FFA released due to lipolysis of
VLDL by bLPL was rapid and could be detected within 1 min. Moreover,
the rate of lipolysis was linear up to 60 min before it reached a
maximum (data not shown). A double reciprocal plot of 1/V vs.
1/[S] (where V is rate of lipolysis and
[S] is VLDL-TG concentration) is shown in Fig.
4. The intercept on the y-axis gives the maximum velocity of LPL activity (Vmax),
and the x-axis intercept gives the substrate (VLDL-TG)
concentration at half-maximal velocity (Km) for
this lipolytic reaction. The apparent Km for control and diabetic VLDL was 0.15 and 0.26 mM, respectively, whereas
the Vmax was 20.4 and 31.3 mU of FFA released for
control and diabetic VLDL, respectively, suggesting that diabetic VLDL was hydrolyzed as effectively as VLDL obtained from control animals.
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VLDL clearance by isolated control and diabetic hearts.
We next attempted to assess whether the diabetic heart could clear
[3H]VLDL faster than control hearts. Having
established that control and diabetic VLDL were essentially similar,
control and diabetic rats were perfused only with control
[3H]VLDL. Figure 6
compares the rate of [3H]VLDL clearance from
recirculating buffer perfused retrogradely through control and 2-wk
diabetic hearts. Metabolism of [3H]VLDL by the
isolated control heart was slow (net loss 17%, rate 0.50 ± 0.17 nmol/min) but comparable to previously reported values (26). In
contrast to control rat hearts, the rate of disappearance of VLDL-TG
(over a perfusion period of 90 min) was more rapid from diabetic rat
hearts (net loss 44%, rate 0.93 ± 0.23 nmol/min). It has been
suggested that LPL can detach from the endothelium during lipolysis
(42). To determine whether LPL can be released by recirculating VLDL,
enzyme activity was also determined in the buffer chamber after 30 min.
Perfusion of control hearts for 90 min with unlabeled VLDL did not
result in detachment of LPL from its binding sites (159 and 120 nmol · ml
1 · h
1
for LPL activity in buffer without and with VLDL, respectively). The
increased VLDL-TG hydrolysis was essentially abolished by prior
perfusion of the diabetic heart with heparin, implicating LPL in this
process (net loss of VLDL-TG in a heparin-preperfused diabetic heart
at the end of 90 min was 16%). In all the above groups, heart
rate remained unchanged (165 ± 8 and 167 ± 5 beats/min for control
and diabetic rats, respectively) throughout the perfusion period.
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DISCUSSION |
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We previously reported that peak heparin-releasable LPL activity (believed to represent the endothelium-bound enzyme fraction) was augmented in the isolated perfused diabetic rat heart (30). However, inasmuch as heparin can diffuse through the arterial wall (20), it could release LPL present within the endothelial cell and at the subendothelial, interstitial, and myocyte cell surfaces in addition to the enzyme bound to the luminal side of the endothelium. Recently, using a modified Langendorff heart perfusion (that separates coronary from interstitial fluid) and immunohistochemistry, we established that in diabetes the increase in LPL activity or protein originates mainly from the luminal surface of capillary blood vessels (38). Capillary luminal LPL can be regulated by way of translocation from the myocyte or through a process that involves internalization and recycling of LPL within the vascular endothelial cell (39). Given the latter, we were still undecided as to whether this augmented capillary LPL was located inside endothelial cells or was attached to binding sites in the lumen. In the present study we extend our earlier findings and report that inasmuch as heparinase was capable of releasing a two- to threefold greater quantity of LPL from diabetic than from control rat hearts, the augmented LPL is likely bound to HSPG-binding sites in the coronary lumen.
Hypertriglyceridemia is a common metabolic disorder associated with STZ-induced diabetes (32). In an insulin-deficient state, excessive circulating TG could be a consequence of increased production of lipoproteins or a reduced clearance of TG from the blood (due to a depleted post-heparin plasma lipolytic pool of LPL). However, TG secretion rates in control and diabetic rats have been reported to be comparable (8, 15), and post-heparin plasma lipolytic activity in this and other (7) studies was not significantly reduced in diabetic rats. The possibility remained that changes in structure of lipoproteins could explain this hypertriglyceridemia. Several in vitro and in vivo studies in clinical and experimental diabetes have shown that VLDL and chylomicrons undergo changes in structure and composition such that they may become poorer substrates for LPL (1, 15, 19, 21, 25). If VLDLs and chylomicrons are altered during diabetes, another question of overriding importance is whether the diabetic heart (with its augmented LPL activity) is, in fact, capable of metabolizing these TG-rich lipoproteins. In the present study we were unable to detect any difference in the composition of apolipoproteins between control and diabetic VLDL. More importantly, no significant difference in lipolysis rates or in the characteristics of LPL substrate kinetics (Km and Vmax) was observed between control and diabetic rats. Thus VLDL prepared from diabetic rats appears to be a normal substrate for LPL, and impaired lipolysis of these particles may not be a causal factor toward the development of hypertriglyceridemia.
Inasmuch as diabetic rats in the present study were hypertriglyceridemic in the fed but not the fasted state, it is likely that excessive accumulation of TG occurs as a result of changes in the characteristics of chylomicrons, the other major TG-containing lipoprotein. Mamo et al. (21) demonstrated that lipoproteins (plasma lipoprotein fraction of density <1.006 g/ml that includes chylomicrons and VLDL) of diabetic origin are hydrolyzed by LPL at a significantly slower rate than lipoproteins from normal rats. However, inasmuch as fasting for 16 h before recovery of lipoproteins eliminated this difference in rates of lipolysis, the authors concluded that during diabetes the lipolytic defect might be specific for chylomicrons. Interestingly, [14C]chylomicrons obtained from STZ-induced diabetic rats, when intravenously injected into control animals, disappeared from the circulation at a significantly slower rate than similarly prepared chylomicrons injected into control animals (19). The question of whether hearts from diabetic animals in our study are able to clear chylomicrons efficiently remains to be answered. However, an earlier study has reported that, despite poor peripheral clearance of chylomicrons, uptake of this lipoprotein is threefold higher in cardiac tissue from diabetic than from nondiabetic rats (19).
When radiolabeled VLDL-TG were perfused through the isolated heart and the decline in TG radioactivity was monitored with time, diabetic hearts metabolized VLDL at a faster rate than control rat hearts. This increased VLDL-TG clearance from the diabetic heart is in agreement with the enhanced LPL activity and mass reported previously (30, 38). Inasmuch as prior removal of LPL by perfusion with heparin prevented this increased clearance of VLDL, this argued against a receptor-mediated removal of this lipoprotein by the diabetic heart (41). Moreover, the increased clearance of VLDL from the diabetic heart was not a result of an increased lipolysis in the buffer chamber due to detachment of LPL. We (36) and others (9) demonstrated that VLDL does not result in detachment of LPL from its HSPG complex.
In conclusion, our results demonstrate that, during diabetes, rapid
removal of VLDL from the diabetic heart could be one mechanism for the
provision of FFAs for energy production, to compensate for the
diminished contribution of glucose as an energy source. In an
insulin-deficient state, adipose tissue lipolysis is enhanced, resulting in elevated circulating FFAs (29). In addition, an increased
activity of myocardial enzymes that catalyze the synthesis of TG
promotes the accumulation of intracellular TG stores during diabetes
(22). Subsequent hydrolysis of this augmented TG store could also lead
to high tissue FFA levels (17). In view of these mechanisms that
enhance cardiac FFA levels, the relative significance of cardiac LPL
activity in delivering FFA to the diabetic heart is unknown.
Interestingly, when the uptake patterns of albumin-bound and
VLDL-TG-derived FFA were compared in human placental cells (macrophages
and trophoblasts), the uptake of albumin-bound FFA after 24 h was
4-6% of the initial amount contained in the incubation medium. In
contrast, when these cells were incubated with labeled VLDL-TG,
cellular TG-FFA content was manyfold higher. Thus, at least in some
cell types, TG-rich lipoproteins may be a more efficient means to
deliver FFA than are albumin-bound FFAs, and this emphasizes the
importance of LPL in the supply of FFA to the heart (3, 18). A caveat
is that this abnormally high capillary endothelial LPL activity could
provide excess FFA to the diabetic heart, leading to a number of
metabolic, morphological, and mechanical changes and, eventually, to
cardiac disease (31, 34) (Fig. 7).
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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These studies were supported by operating grants from the Canadian Diabetes Association (in honor of Ralph Gregory Chalmers) and the Heart and Stroke Foundation of British Columbia and Yukon. The financial support of the Heart and Stroke Foundation of British Columbia and Yukon in the form of a Research Traineeship to N. Sambandam is also gratefully acknowledged.
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FOOTNOTES |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. §1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: B. Rodrigues, Div. of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, The University of British Columbia, 2146 East Mall, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T 1Z3 (E-mail: rodrigue{at}unixg.ubc.ca).
Received 19 July 1999; accepted in final form 10 December 1999.
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