Introduction: Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction (HFpEF) is a multifaceted disease, intricately linked with sympathetic nervous system activation. Despite advancements, therapeutic options for HFpEF remain constrained, largely due to a dearth of fitting preclinical models. Renal denervation (RDN), an emerging intervention, holds potential in attenuating sympathetic activity and ameliorating HFpEF high-risk factors such as hypertension and insulin resistance. Aims: our study is designed to establish a multifactorial HFpEF mouse model and assess the therapeutic implications of RDN. Methods: Aged 12-month-old male C57BL/6N mice were exposed to a high-fat diet (60% calories from lard) and L-NAME (0.5 g/L in drinking water) over a 5-week period to generate a multi-hit HFpEF model. The efficacy of the model was assessed through a range of methods, encompassing echocardiography, histology, exercise exhaustion tests, serum NT-proBNP measurements, and intraperitoneal glucose tolerance tests. Upon successful model establishment, mice were randomized to receive either bilateral renal denervation or a sham operation. The subsequent impact of RDN on the aforementioned parameters was then evaluated. Results: In C57BL/6N mice, a cardiometabolic HFpEF phenotype was effectively induced through a multi-hit approach encompassing a high-fat diet, L-NAME administration, and aging. This potent combination triggered obesity and glucose intolerance, culminating in the emergence of characteristic HFpEF features such as cardiac hypertrophy, fibrosis, preserved fractional shortening with impaired deformation, atrial enlargement, lung congestion, hypertension and decreased exercise endurance. Intervention with RDN mitigated this cardiometabolic dysregulation and enhanced cardiac function, as demonstrated by reductions in cardiac hypertrophy, myocardial fibrosis, atrial weight, NT-proBNP levels, lung congestion, and improved exercise endurance. Conclusions: Our study suggests that RDN effectively mitigates cardiac function and structure in a multi-hit HFpEF mouse model, indicating its potential as a promising therapeutic strategy for HFpEF.
Read full abstract