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Cardiac Molecular Analysis Reveals Aging-Associated Metabolic Alterations Promoting Glycosaminoglycans Accumulation via Hexosamine Biosynthetic Pathway

  • Luís F. Grilo
  • , Kip D. Zimmerman
  • , Sobha Puppala
  • , Jeannie Chan
  • , Hillary F. Huber
  • , Ge Li
  • , Avinash Y.L. Jadhav
  • , Benlian Wang
  • , Cun Li
  • , Geoffrey D. Clarke
  • , Thomas C. Register
  • , Paulo J. Oliveira
  • , Peter W. Nathanielsz
  • , Michael Olivier
  • , Susana P. Pereira
  • , Laura A. Cox

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Age is a prominent risk factor for cardiometabolic disease, often leading to heart structural and functional changes. However, precise molecular mechanisms underlying cardiac remodeling and dysfunction exclusively resulting from physiological aging remain elusive. Previous research demonstrated age-related functional alterations in baboons, analogous to humans. The goal of this study is to identify early cardiac molecular alterations preceding functional adaptations, shedding light on the regulation of age-associated changes. Unbiased transcriptomics of left ventricle samples are performed from female baboons aged 7.5–22.1 years (human equivalent ≈30–88 years). Weighted-gene correlation network and pathway enrichment analyses are performed, with histological validation. Modules of transcripts negatively correlated with age implicated declined metabolism-oxidative phosphorylation, tricarboxylic acid cycle, glycolysis, and fatty-acid β-oxidation. Transcripts positively correlated with age suggested a metabolic shift toward glucose-dependent anabolic pathways, including hexosamine biosynthetic pathway (HBP). This shift is associated with increased glycosaminoglycan synthesis, modification, precursor synthesis via HBP, and extracellular matrix accumulation, verified histologically. Upregulated extracellular matrix-induced signaling coincided with glycosaminoglycan accumulation, followed by cardiac hypertrophy-related pathways. Overall, these findings revealed a transcriptional shift in metabolism favoring glycosaminoglycan accumulation through HBP before cardiac hypertrophy. Unveiling this metabolic shift provides potential targets for age-related cardiac diseases, offering novel insights into early age-related mechanisms.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number2309211
JournalAdvanced Science
Volume11
Issue number38
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 16 2024

Keywords

  • aging
  • cardiac hypertrophy
  • cardiac metabolism
  • cardiovascular disease
  • glycosaminoglycan

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Medicine (miscellaneous)
  • General Chemical Engineering
  • Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous)
  • General Materials Science
  • General Engineering
  • General Physics and Astronomy

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