Abstract

AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a heterotrimeric enzyme that is expressed in most mammalian tissues including cardiac muscle. Among the multiple biological processes influenced by AMPK, regulation of fuel supply and energy-generating pathways in response to the metabolic needs of the organism is fundamental and likely accounts for the remarkable evolutionary conservation of this enzyme complex. By regulating the activity of acetyl-coenzyme A carboxylase, AMPK affects levels of malonyl-coenzyme A, a key energy regulator in the cell. AMPK is generally quiescent under normal conditions but is activated in response to hormonal signals and stresses sufficient to produce an increase in AMP/ATP ratio, such as hypoglycemia, strenuous exercise, anoxia, and ischemia. Once active, muscle AMPK enhances uptake and oxidative metabolism of fatty acids as well as increases glucose transport and glycolysis. Data from AMPK deficiency models suggest that AMPK activity might influence the pathophysiology and therapy of diabetes and increase heart tolerance to ischemia. Effects that are not as well understood include AMPK regulation of transcription. Different AMPK isoforms are found in distinct locations within the cell and have distinct functions in different tissues. A principal mode of AMPK activation is phosphorylation by upstream kinases (eg, LKB1). These kinases have a fundamental role in cell-cycle regulation and protein synthesis, suggesting involvement in a number of human disorders including cardiac hypertrophy, apoptosis, cancer, and atherosclerosis. The physiological role played by AMPK during health and disease is far from being clearly defined. Naturally occurring mutations affecting the nucleotide-sensing modules in the regulatory gamma subunit of AMPK lead to enzyme dysregulation and inappropriate activation under resting conditions. Glycogen accumulation ensues, leading to human disease manifesting as cardiac hypertrophy, accessory atrioventricular connections, and degeneration of the physiological conduction system. Whether AMPK is a key participant or bystander in other disease states and whether its selective manipulation may significantly benefit these conditions remain important questions.

Highlights

  • AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a heterotrimeric enzyme that is expressed in most mammalian tissues including cardiac muscle

  • This expanding research field and multiple excellent reviews on AMPK4–8 are stimulated in part by the discovery of gene mutations in the subunits of AMPK that trigger animal and human diseases characterized by glycogen storage, evidence that AMPK plays can mitigate against ischemic damage, apoptosis and possibly atherosclerosis, and advances in understanding mammalian carbohydrate metabolism, which encourages speculation that AMPK regulation may provide new opportunities for diabetes therapies

  • AMPK plays a critical role in cardiac metabolism, as it does in a variety of cell types

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Summary

Role During Health and Disease

Abstract—AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a heterotrimeric enzyme that is expressed in most mammalian tissues including cardiac muscle. A principal mode of AMPK activation is phosphorylation by upstream kinases (eg, LKB1) These kinases have a fundamental role in cell-cycle regulation and protein synthesis, suggesting involvement in a number of human disorders including cardiac hypertrophy, apoptosis, cancer, and atherosclerosis. Evolutionary conservation of its subunits in eukaryotes, from yeast to plants to humans, indicates fundamental biological functions that must confer significant benefits.[1,2,3] Often described as an energy gauge, AMPK participates in regulation of fuel supply and energy-generating pathways in response to the metabolic needs of organ systems including liver, central nervous system, fat tissue and striated skeletal and cardiac muscles.[4,5] Until recently, the roles of AMPK in physiology and human disease were underappreciated. The past decade has witnessed an exponential increase in studies of the roles of AMPK in normal stress response and pathophysiological

Decreased glucose uptake and ischemic tolerance
AMPK Structure and Function
AMPK have challenged the interpretation that suggested that
AMPK in Cardiac Metabolism
Age of Onset
The Mechanism of Glycogen Storage
AMPK and Cardiac Electrophysiology
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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