B-hydroxybutyrate accumulates in the rat heart during low-flow ischaemia with implications for functional recovery

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Abstract

Extrahepatic tissues which oxidise ketone bodies also have the capacity to accumulate them under particular conditions. We hypothesised that acetyl-coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) accumulation and altered redox status during low-flow ischaemia would support ketone body production in the heart. Combining a Langendorff heart model of low-flow ischaemia/reperfusion with liquid chromatography coupled tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS), we show that b-hydroxybutyrate (b-OHB) accumulated in the ischaemic heart to 23.9 nmol/gww and was secreted into the coronary effluent. Sodium oxamate, a lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) inhibitor, increased ischaemic b-OHB levels 5.3-fold and slowed contractile recovery. Inhibition of b-hydroxy-b-methylglutaryl (HMG)-CoA synthase (HMGCS2) with hymeglusin lowered ischaemic b-OHB accumulation by 40%, despite increased flux through succinyl-CoA-3-oxaloacid CoA transferase (SCOT), resulting in greater contractile recovery. Hymeglusin also protected cardiac mitochondrial respiratory capacity during ischaemia/reperfusion. In conclusion, net ketone generation occurs in the heart under conditions of low-flow ischaemia. The process is driven by flux through both HMGCS2 and SCOT, and impacts on cardiac functional recovery from ischaemia/reperfusion.

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Lindsay, R. T., Dieckmann, S., Krzyzanska, D., Manetta-Jones, D., West, J. A., Castro, C., … Murray, A. J. (2021). B-hydroxybutyrate accumulates in the rat heart during low-flow ischaemia with implications for functional recovery. ELife, 10. https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.71270

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