Abstract

Beta-1-adrenergic receptor antibodies (β1-AAbs) function as arrhythmogenic molecules in autoimmune-related atrial fibrillation (AF). This study examined the potential impact of pioglitazone, an agonist for peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ (PPAR-γ), on atrial remodeling induced by β1-AAbs. An in vivo study was performed to confirm the protective effects of pioglitazone on β1- AAbs-induced atrial remodeling. GW9662, a PPAR-γ antagonist, was employed to identify the potential therapeutic target of pioglitazone. The rats were administered subcutaneous injections of the second extracellular loop peptide for 8 weeks to establish active immunization models. Pioglitazone was then administered orally for 2 weeks. Epicardial electrophysiologic studies, multielectrode array measurements, and echocardiography were conducted to examine atrial remodeling. Glucose metabolism products and key metabolic molecules were measured to evaluate the atrial substrate metabolism. Mitochondrial morphologies and function indices were tested to depict the underlying links between atrial metabolism and mitochondrial homeostasis under the pioglitazone treatment. Pioglitazone significantly reversed β1-AAbs-induced AF susceptibility, ameliorated atrial structural remodeling, decreased the global insulin resistance reflected in the plasma glucose and insulin levels, and increased the protein expressions of glycolipid uptake and transportation (GLUT1, CD36, and CPT1a). These trends were counterbalanced by the GW9662 intervention. Mechanistically, pioglitazone mitigated the atrial mitochondrial network damage and partly renovated the mitochondrial biogenesis, even the mitochondrial dynamics, which were reversed by inhibiting the PPAR-γ target. Pioglitazone effectively reduced the AF vulnerability and recovered the atrial myocardial metabolism and mitochondrial damage. The potential anti-remodeling effect of pioglitazone on the atrium was associated with the moderately increased expression of key membrane proteins related to glucose transporter and fatty acid uptake, which may promote the increased myocardial preference for utilization of FA as the key cardiac oxidative fuel and ameliorate the atrial metabolic inflexibility.

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