Abstract

Heart failure affects millions of people worldwide with mortality near 50% within five years. This disease is characterized by widespread cardiac and systemic metabolic changes, but a comprehensive evaluation of metabolism in failing human hearts is lacking. Here, we provide a comprehensive depiction of cardiac and systemic metabolic changes in 89 explanted failing and non-failing human hearts through integration of plasma and cardiac tissue metabolomics, genome-wide RNAseq, and proteomic data. The data confirm a profound bioenergetic defect in end-stage human heart failure and demonstrate extensive changes in metabolic homeostasis. The data indicate a substantial defect in fatty acid (FA) use in failing hearts, in particular unsaturated FAs. Reduction of FAs and acyl-carnitines in failing tissue in contrast to concomitant elevations in plasma suggest a defect in import of FAs into the cell, rather than a defect in FA oxidation. Intermediates of glycolysis, the pentose phosphate pathway, and glycogen synthesis are all similarly reduced, as is expression of GLUT1, indicating diminished glucose uptake. However, there was no significant change in tissue pyruvate content, suggesting an increase in lactate utilization. The data suggest increased flux of pyruvate into mitochondria, likely promoting pyruvate oxidation but not pyruvate carboxylation. Blunted anabolic pyruvate flux, in turn, likely leads to insufficient TCA cycle intermediates. Ketone levels were increased in both failing tissue and plasma, as previously reported. The phospholipid content of failing human hearts is greatly increased in both failing tissue and plasma. Nucleotide synthesis pathways also appear to be reprogrammed, with a notable decrease in adenosine metabolism, specifically. Together, these data indicate widespread change in the local cardiac and greater systemic metabolic landscape in severe human heart failure.

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