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Mechanisms Underlying Cardiovascular Benefits of Sodium Glucose Co-Transporter-2 Inhibitors: Myocardial Substrate or Sodium/Hydrogen Exchanger?Baker, Hana Elisabeth 01 1900 (has links)
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) / Recent clinical outcome studies demonstrate that Sodium glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) significantly reduce major adverse cardiovascular events and heart failure outcomes in subjects with type 2 diabetes mellitus. At present, several hypotheses have been proposed to explain the observed cardiovascular benefit of SGLT2i, however, the mechanisms responsible remain to be elucidated. This investigation tested the hypothesis that SGLT2i improves cardiac function and efficiency during acute, regional ischemia/reperfusion injury via preferential shifts in myocardial substrate selection and/or inhibition of cardiac sodium/hydrogen exchanger-1 (NHE-1).
Our initial investigation evaluated the effects of 24 hour pretreatment of the SGLT2i canagliflozin on cardiac contractile function, substrate utilization, and efficiency before and during regional myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury in healthy swine. At the onset of ischemia, canagliflozin increased left ventricular end diastolic and systolic volumes which returned to baseline with reperfusion. This increased end diastolic volume was directly associated with increased stroke volume and stroke work relative to controls during ischemia. Canagliflozin also increased cardiac work efficiency during ischemia relative to control swine. No differences in myocardial substrate uptake of glucose, lactate, fatty acids or ketones were detected between groups. In separate experiments using a longer 60 min coronary occlusion, canagliflozin significantly diminished myocardial infarct size.
Subsequent studies investigated the effect of an acute administration (15-30 min pre-treatment) of canagliflozin and the NHE-1i cariporide on cardiac contractile function efficiency in response to myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury. Similar to our initial studies, canagliflozin increased diastolic filling, stroke work and improved cardiac work efficiency relative to untreated control hearts during the ischemic period. In contrast, cariporide did not alter ventricular filling volume, cardiac output or work efficiency at any time point. Additional examination of AP-1 cells transfected with wild-type NHE-1 showed dose-dependent inhibition of NHE-1 activity by cariporide, while canagliflozin had minimal effect on overall activity. This investigation demonstrates that SGLT2i improves cardiac function and efficiency during acute, regional ischemia in healthy swine. However, the present data fail to support the hypothesis that these SGLT2i-mediated improvements involve either preferential alterations in myocardial substrate utilization or the inhibition of NHE-1 activity.
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Intravital imaging of hemodynamic glomerular effects of enalapril or/and empagliflozin in STZ-diabetic miceKroeger, Hannah, Kessel, Friederike, Sradnick, Jan, Todorov, Vladimir, Gembardt, Florian, Hugo, Christian 30 May 2024 (has links)
Background: Diabetic kidney disease is the leading cause of end-stage renal disease. Administration of ACE inhibitors or/and SGLT2 inhibitors show renoprotective effects in diabetic and other kidney diseases. The underlying renoprotective mechanisms of SGLT2 inhibition, especially in combination with ACE inhibition, are incompletely understood. We used longitudinal intravital microscopy to directly elucidate glomerular hemodynamics on a single nephron level in response to the ACE inhibitor enalapril or/and the SGLT2 inhibitor empagliflozin.
Methods: Five weeks after the induction of diabetes by streptozotocin, male C57BL/6 mice were treated with enalapril, empagliflozin, enalapril/empagliflozin or placebo for 3 days. To identify hemodynamic regulation mechanisms, longitudinal intravital multiphoton microscopy was employed to measure single nephron glomerular filtration rate (snGFR) and afferent/efferent arteriole width.
Results: Diabetic mice presented a significant hyperfiltration. Compared to placebo treatment, snGFR was reduced in response to enalapril, empagliflozin, or enalapril/empagliflozin administration under diabetic conditions. While enalapril treatment caused significant dilation of the efferent arteriole (12.55 ± 1.46 µm vs. control 11.92 ± 1.04 µm, p < 0.05), empagliflozin led to a decreased afferent arteriole diameter (11.19 ± 2.55 µm vs. control 12.35 ± 1.32 µm, p < 0.05) in diabetic mice. Unexpectedly under diabetic conditions, the combined treatment with enalapril/empagliflozin had no effects on both afferent and efferent arteriole diameter change.
Conclusion: SGLT2 inhibition, besides ACE inhibition, is an essential hemodynamic regulator of glomerular filtration during diabetes mellitus. Nevertheless, additional mechanisms—independent from hemodynamic regulation—are involved in the nephroprotective effects especially of the combination therapy and should be further explored in future studies.
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