Specific skeletal myopathy constitutes a common feature of heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and type 2 diabetes mellitus, where it can be characterized by the loss of skeletal muscle oxidative capacity. There is evidence from in vitro and animal studies that iron deficiency affects skeletal muscle functioning mainly in the context of its energetics by limiting oxidative metabolism in favour of glycolysis and by alterations in both carbohydrate and fat catabolic processing. In this review, we depict the possible molecular pathomechanisms of skeletal muscle energetic impairment and postulate iron deficiency as an important factor causally linked to loss of muscle oxidative capacity that contributes to skeletal myopathy seen in patients with heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Iron deficiency (ID) is a common and ominous comorbidity in heart failure (HF) and predicts worse outcomes, independently of the presence of anaemia. Accumulated data from animal models of systemic ID suggest that ID is associated with several functional and structural abnormalities of the heart. However, the exact role of myocardial iron deficiency irrespective of systemic ID and/or anaemia has been elusive. Recently, several transgenic models of cardiac-specific ID have been developed to investigate the influence of ID on cardiac tissue. In this review, we discuss structural and functional cardiac consequences of ID in these models and summarize data from clinical studies. Moreover, the beneficial effects of intravenous iron supplementation are specified.
The differential availability of iron during hypoxia is presumed to affect the functioning of cardiac and skeletal myocytes. Rat H9C2 cardiomyocytes and L6G8C5 myocytes were cultured for 48 h in normoxic or hypoxic conditions at the optimal, reduced or increased iron concentration. The mRNA expression levels of markers of apoptosis [B‑cell lymphoma‑2 (Bcl2; inhibition) and Bcl‑2‑activated X protein (Bax; induction)], atrophy (Atrogin), glycolysis (pyruvate kinase 2; PKM2) and iron metabolism [transferrin receptor 1 (TfR1; iron importer), ferroportin 1 (FPN1; iron exporter), ferritin heavy chain (FTH; iron storage protein) and hepcidin (HAMP; iron regulator)] were determined using reverse transcription‑quantitative polymerase chain reaction, and cell viability was measured using an tetrazolium reduction assay. Cardiomyocytes and myocytes, when exposed to hypoxia, demonstrated an increased Bax/Bcl‑2 gene expression ratio (P<0.05). Additional deferoxamine (DFO) treatment resulted in further increases in Bax/Bcl‑2 in each cell type (P<0.001 each) and this was associated with the 15% loss in viability. The analogous alterations were observed in both cell types upon ammonium ferric citrate (AFC) treatment during hypoxia; however, the increased Bax/Bcl‑2 ratio and associated viability loss was lower compared with that in case of DFO treatment (P<0.05 each). Under hypoxic conditions, myocytes demonstrated an increased expression of PKM2 (P<0.01). Additional DFO treatment caused an increase in the mRNA expression levels of PKM2 and Atrogin‑1 (P<0.001 and P<0.05, respectively), whereas AFC treatment caused an increased mRNA expression of PKM2 (P<0.01) and accompanied decreased mRNA expression of Atrogin‑1 (P<0.05). The expression augmentation of PKM2 during hypoxia was greater upon low iron compared with that of ferric salt treatment (P<0.01). Both cell types upon DFO during hypoxia demonstrated the increased expression of TfR1 and HAMP (all P<0.05), which was associated with the increased Bax/Bcl‑2 ratio (all R>0.6 and P<0.05). In conclusion, during hypoxia iron deficiency impairs the viability of cardiomyocytes and myocytes more severely compared with iron excess. In myocytes, during hypoxia iron may act in a protective manner, since the level of atrophy is decreased in the iron‑salt‑treated cells.
A b s t r a c tBackground: Iron is presumed to play an important role in the functioning of cardiomyocytes and skeletal myocytes. There is scarcity of direct data characterising the cells functioning when exposed to iron depletion or iron overload in a cellular environment. There is some clinical evidence demonstrating that iron deficiency has serious negative prognostic consequences in heart failure (HF) patients and its correction brought clinical benefit. Aim:The viability of the cells upon unfavourable iron concentration in the cell culture medium and the presence of the molecular system of proteins involved in intracellular iron metabolism in these cells have been studied.Methods: H9C2 rat adult cardiomyocytes and L6G8C5 rat adult skeletal myocytes were cultured for 24 h in optimal vs. reduced vs. increased iron concentrations. Intracellular iron content was measured by flame atomic absorption spectroscopy (FAAS). We analysed the mRNA expression of: ferritin heavy and light chains (FTH and FTL; iron storage proteins), myoglobin (MB, oxygen storage protein) ferroportin type 1 (FPN1; iron exporter), transferrin receptor type 1 (TfR1; iron importer), hepcidin (HAMP; iron metabolism regulator) using qPCR, the level of respective proteins using Western Blot (WB), and the viability of the cells using flow cytometry and cell viability tetrazolium reduction assay (MTS).Results: Cardiomyocytes exposed to gradually reduced iron concentrations in the medium demonstrated a decrease in the mRNA expression of FTH, FTL, FPN1, MB, and HAMP (all R = -0.75, p < 0.05), indicating depleted iron status in the cells. As a consequence, the expression of TfR1 (R = 0.7, p < 0.05) was increased, reflecting a facilitated entrance of iron to the cells. The inverse changes occurred in H9C2 cells exposed to increased iron concentrations in the medium in comparison to control cells. The same pattern of changes in the mRNA expressions was observed in myocytes, and there was a strong correlation between analogous genes in both cell lines (all R > 0.9, p < 0.0001). WB analysis revealed the analogous pattern of changes in protein expression as an mRNA profile. Both iron depletion and iron excess impaired viability of cardiomyocytes and skeletal myocytes. Conclusions:Both rat cardiomyocytes and myocyte cells contain the set of genes involved in the intracellular iron metabolism, and both types of investigated cells respond to changing iron concentrations in the cultured environment. Both iron deficiency (ID) and iron overload is detrimental for the cells. This data may explain the beneficial effects of iron supplementation in patients with ID in HF.
(1) Background: Oxidative energy metabolism is presumed to rely on the optimal iron supply. Primary human cardiac myocytes (HCM) exposed to different iron availability conditions during mechanical stretch are anticipated to demonstrate expression changes of genes involved in aerobic and anaerobic metabolic pathways. (2) Methods: HCM were cultured for 48 h either in static conditions and upon mechanical stretch at the optimal versus reduced versus increased iron concentrations. We analyzed the expression of pyruvate kinase (PKM2), lactate dehydrogenase A (LDHA), and mitochondrial complexes I–V at the mRNA and protein levels. The concentration of l-lactate was assessed by means of lactate oxidase method-based kit. (3) Results: Reduced iron concentrations during mechanical work caused a decreased expression of complexes I–V (all p < 0.05). The expression of PKM2 and LDHA, as well as the medium concentration of l-lactate, was increased in these conditions (both p < 0.05). HCM exposed to the increased iron concentration during mechanical effort demonstrated a decreased expression of mitochondrial complexes (all p < 0.01); however, a decrement was smaller than in case of iron chelation (p < 0.05). The iron-enriched medium caused a decrease in expression of LDHA and did not influence the concentration of l-lactate. (4) Conclusions: During mechanical effort, the reduced iron availability enhances anaerobic glycolysis and extracellular lactate production, whilst decreasing mitochondrial aerobic pathway in HCM. Iron enrichment during mechanical effort may be protective in the context of intracellular protein machinery of non-oxidative metabolism with no effect on the extracellular lactate concentration.
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