Abstract
Cardiac autophagy is inhibited in type 1 diabetes. However, it remains unknown if the reduced autophagy contributes to the pathogenesis of diabetic cardiomyopathy. We addressed this question using mouse models with gain- and loss-of-autophagy. Autophagic flux was inhibited in diabetic hearts when measured at multiple time points after diabetes induction by streptozotocin as assessed by protein levels of microtubule-associated protein light chain 3 form 2 (LC3-II) or GFP-LC3 puncta in the absence and presence of the lysosome inhibitor bafilomycin A1. Autophagy in diabetic hearts was further reduced in beclin 1- or Atg16-deficient mice but was restored partially or completely by overexpression of beclin 1 to different levels. Surprisingly, diabetes-induced cardiac damage was substantially attenuated in beclin 1- and Atg16-deficient mice as shown by improved cardiac function as well as reduced levels of oxidative stress, interstitial fibrosis, and myocyte apoptosis. In contrast, diabetic cardiac damage was dose-dependently exacerbated by beclin 1 overexpression. The cardioprotective effects of autophagy deficiency were reproduced in OVE26 diabetic mice. These effects were associated with partially restored mitophagy and increased expression and mitochondrial localization of Rab9, an essential regulator of a non-canonical alternative autophagic pathway. Together, these findings demonstrate that the diminished autophagy is an adaptive response that limits cardiac dysfunction in type 1 diabetes, presumably through up-regulation of alternative autophagy and mitophagy.
Highlights
Autophagy activity is reduced in type 1 diabetic heart, but the functional role remains unclear
LC3-II levels were not changed in STZ-treated mice at 3 weeks, but they were markedly reduced at 6 weeks and remained low at 9 and 12 weeks (Fig. 1B), suggesting that diabetes may decrease the number of autophagic vacuoles in the heart
Cardiac damage in Wild type (WT) diabetic mice was substantially attenuated in beclin 1ϩ/Ϫ or ATG16L1-HM mice where diabetes caused a more dramatic reduction in autophagic flux
Summary
Autophagy activity is reduced in type 1 diabetic heart, but the functional role remains unclear. The cardioprotective effects of autophagy deficiency were reproduced in OVE26 diabetic mice These effects were associated with partially restored mitophagy and increased expression and mitochondrial localization of Rab, an essential regulator of a non-canonical alternative autophagic pathway. Together, these findings demonstrate that the diminished autophagy is an adaptive response that limits cardiac. Metformin diminished diabetic cardiac injury and restored autophagic activity, suggesting the hypothesis that autophagy is protective in the type 1 diabetic heart [34]. In the present study we determined the functional role of autophagy in type 1 diabetes-induced cardiac injury using genetic mouse models. And contrary to the initial hypothesis, diminished autophagy turned out to be a beneficial adaptive response that protected against diabetic cardiac injury
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