Publication | Open Access
Cardiomyocyte-Restricted Deletion of PPAR<i>β</i>/<i>δ</i>in PPAR<i>α</i>-Null Mice Causes Impaired Mitochondrial Biogenesis and Defense, but No Further Depression of Myocardial Fatty Acid Oxidation
27
Citations
29
References
2011
Year
Cardiac MuscleCardiomyocyte-restricted DeletionPparβ/δ ShareOxidative StressMetabolic SyndromeMitochondrial BiogenesisDisease PathophysiologyMetabolic SignalingCardiologyMouse ModelMolecular SignalingHealth SciencesCardiomyopathyMolecular PhysiologyBiochemistryCardiac ReprogrammingFurther DepressionGlobal Pparα KnockoutDevelopmental BiologyMitochondrial FunctionCardiovascular DiseasePhysiologyCardiometabolic PhysiologyLipoprotein MetabolismMetabolismMedicine
It is well documented that PPARα and PPARβ/δ share overlapping functions in regulating myocardial lipid metabolism. However, previous studies demonstrated that cardiomyocyte-restricted PPARβ/δ deficiency in mice leads to severe cardiac pathological development, whereas global PPARα knockout shows a benign cardiac phenotype. It is unknown whether a PPARα-null background would alter the pathological development in mice with cardiomyocyte-restricted PPARβ/δ deficiency. In the present study, a mouse model with long-term PPARβ/δ deficiency in PPARα-null background showed a comparably reduced cardiac expression of lipid metabolism to those of single PPAR-deficient mouse models. The PPARα-null background did not rescue or aggravate the cardiac pathological development linked to cardiomyocyte-restricted PPARβ/δ deficiency. Moreover, PPARα-null did not alter the phenotypic development in adult mice with the short-term deletion of PPARβ/δ in their hearts, which showed mitochondrial abnormalities, depressed cardiac performance, and cardiac hypertrophy with attenuated expression of key factors in mitochondrial biogenesis and defense. The present study demonstrates that cardiomyocyte-restricted deletion of PPARβ/δ in PPARα-null mice causes impaired mitochondrial biogenesis and defense, but no further depression of fatty acid oxidation. Therefore, PPARβ/δ is essential for maintaining mitochondrial biogenesis and defense in cardiomyocytes independent of PPARα.
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