Macroscopic deposition of epicardial adipose tissue (EAT) has been strongly associated with numerous indices of obesity and cardiovascular disease risk. In contrast, the morphology of EAT adipocytes has rarely been investigated. We aimed to determine whether obesity-driven adipocyte hypertrophy, which is characteristic of other visceral fat depots, is found within EAT adipocytes. EAT samples were collected from cardiac surgery patients (n = 49), stained with haematoxylin & eosin, and analysed for mean adipocyte size and non-adipocyte area. EAT thickness was measured using echocardiography. A significant positive relationship was found between EAT thickness and body mass index (BMI). When stratified into standardized BMI categories, EAT thickness was 58.7% greater (p = 0.003) in patients from the obese (7.3 ± 1.8 mm) compared to normal (4.6 ± 0.9 mm) category. BMI as a continuous variable significantly correlated with EAT thickness (r = 0.56, p < 0.0001). Conversely, no correlation was observed between adipocyte size and either BMI or EAT thickness. No difference in the nonadipocyte area was found between BMI groups. Our results suggest that the increased macroscopic EAT deposition associated with obesity is not caused by adipocyte hypertrophy. Rather, alternative remodelling via adipocyte proliferation might be responsible for the observed EAT expansion. ARTICLE HISTORY
Congenital heart defects contribute to embryonic or neonatal lethality but due to the complexity of cardiac development, the molecular changes associated with such defects are not fully understood. Here, we report that transcription factors (TFs) Brn-3a (POU4F1) and Brn-3b (POU4F2) are important for normal cardiac development. Brn-3a directly represses Brn-3b promoter in cardiomyocytes and consequently Brn-3a knockout (KO) mutant hearts express increased Brn-3b mRNA during mid-gestation, which is linked to hyperplastic growth associated with elevated cyclin D1, a known Brn-3b target gene. However, during late gestation, Brn-3b can cooperate with p53 to enhance transcription of pro-apoptotic genes e.g. Bax, thereby increasing apoptosis and contribute to morphological defects such as non-compaction, ventricular wall/septal thinning and increased crypts/fissures, which may cause lethality of Brn-3a KO mutants soon after birth. Despite this, early embryonic lethality in e9.5 double KO (Brn-3a−/− : Brn-3b−/−) mutants indicate essential functions with partial redundancy during early embryogenesis. High conservation between mammals and zebrafish (ZF) Brn-3b (87%) or Brn-3a (76%) facilitated use of ZF embryos to study potential roles in developing heart. Double morphant embryos targeted with morpholino oligonucleotides to both TFs develop significant cardiac defects (looping abnormalities and valve defects) suggesting essential roles for Brn-3a and Brn-3b in developing hearts.
Epicardial adipose tissue (EAT) deposition has a strong clinical association with atrial arrhythmias; however, whether a direct functional interaction exists between EAT and the myocardium to induce atrial arrhythmias is unknown. Therefore, we aimed to determine whether human EAT can be an acute trigger for arrhythmias in human atrial myocardium. Human trabeculae were obtained from right atrial appendages of patients who have had cardiac surgery ( n = 89). The propensity of spontaneous contractions (SCs) in the trabeculae (proxy for arrhythmias) was determined under physiological conditions and during known triggers of SCs (high Ca2+, β-adrenergic stimulation). To determine whether EAT could trigger SCs, trabeculae were exposed to superfusate of fresh human EAT, and medium of 24 h-cultured human EAT treated with β1/2 (isoproterenol) or β3 (BRL37344) adrenergic agonists. Without exposure to EAT, high Ca2+ and β1/2-adrenergic stimulation acutely triggered SCs in, respectively, 47% and 55% of the trabeculae that previously were not spontaneously active. Acute β3-adrenergic stimulation did not trigger SCs. Exposure of trabeculae to either superfusate of fresh human EAT or untreated medium of 24 h-cultured human EAT did not induce SCs; however, specific β3-adrenergic stimulation of EAT did trigger SCs in the trabeculae, either when applied to fresh (31%) or cultured (50%) EAT. Additionally, fresh EAT increased trabecular contraction and relaxation, whereas media of cultured EAT only increased function when treated with the β3-adrenergic agonist. An acute functional interaction between human EAT and human atrial myocardium exists that increases the propensity for atrial arrhythmias, which depends on β3-adrenergic rather than β1/2-adrenergic stimulation of EAT.
Purpose Increasing cohorts of patients present with diabetic cardiomyopathy, and with no targeted options, treatment often rely on generic pharmaceuticals such as β‐blockers. β‐blocker efficacy is heterogenous, with second generation β‐blocker metoprolol selectively inhibiting β1‐AR, while third generation β‐blocker carvedilol has α1‐AR inhibition, antioxidant, and anti‐apoptotic actions alongside nonselective β‐AR inhibition. These additional properties have led to the hypothesis that carvedilol may improve cardiac contractility in the diabetic heart to a greater extent than metoprolol. The present study aimed to compare the efficacy of metoprolol and carvedilol on myocardial function in animal models and cardiac tissue from patients with type 2 diabetes and preserved ejection fraction. Methods Echocardiographic examination of cardiac function and assessment of myocardial function in isolated trabeculae was carried out in patients with and without diabetes undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) who were prescribed metoprolol or carvedilol. Equivalent measures were undertaken in Zucker Diabetic Fatty (ZDF) rats following 4 weeks treatment with metoprolol or carvedilol. Results Patients receiving carvedilol compared to metoprolol had no difference in cardiac function, and no difference was apparent in myocardial function between β‐blockers. Both β‐blockers similarly improved myocardial function in diabetic ZDF rats treated for 4 weeks, without significantly affecting in vivo cardiac function. Conclusions Metoprolol and carvedilol were found to have no effect on cardiac function in type 2 diabetes with preserved ejection fraction, and were similarly effective in preventing myocardial dysfunction in ZDF rats.
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