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Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 286: H1461-H1470, 2004. First published December 11, 2003; doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00942.2003
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Profiling substrate fluxes in the isolated working mouse heart using 13C-labeled substrates: focusing on the origin and fate of pyruvate and citrate carbons

Maya Khairallah,1 François Labarthe,2 Bertrand Bouchard,2 Gawiyou Danialou,1 Basil J. Petrof,1 and Christine Des Rosiers1,2

1Department of Experimental Medicine, McGill University; and 2Department of Nutrition, University of Montreal, Notre-Dame Hospital Research Center, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H2L 4M1

Submitted 2 October 2003 ; accepted in final form 9 December 2003

The availability of genetically modified mice requires the development of methods to assess heart function and metabolism in the intact beating organ. With the use of radioactive substrates and ex vivo perfusion of the mouse heart in the working mode, previous studies have documented glucose and fatty acid oxidation pathways. This study was aimed at characterizing the metabolism of other potentially important exogenous carbohydrate sources, namely, lactate and pyruvate. This was achieved by using 13C-labeling methods. The mouse heart perfusion setup and buffer composition were optimized to reproduce conditions close to the in vivo milieu in terms of workload, cardiac functions, and substrate-hormone supply to the heart (11 mM glucose, 0.8 nM insulin, 50 µM carnitine, 1.5 mM lactate, 0.2 mM pyruvate, 5 nM epinephrine, 0.7 mM oleate, and 3% albumin). The use of three differentially 13C-labeled carbohydrates and a 13C-labeled long-chain fatty acid allowed the quantitative assessment of the metabolic origin and fate of tissue pyruvate as well as the relative contribution of substrates feeding acetyl-CoA (pyruvate and fatty acids) and oxaloacetate (pyruvate) for mitochondrial citrate synthesis. Beyond concurring with the notion that the mouse heart preferentially uses fatty acids for energy production (63.5 ± 3.9%) and regulates its fuel selection according to the Randle cycle, our study reports for the first time in the mouse heart the following findings. First, exogenous lactate is the major carbohydrate contributing to pyruvate formation (42.0 ± 2.3%). Second, lactate and pyruvate are constantly being taken up and released by the heart, supporting the concept of compartmentation of lactate and glucose metabolism. Finally, mitochondrial anaplerotic pyruvate carboxylation and citrate efflux represent 4.9 ± 1.8 and 0.8 ± 0.1%, respectively, of the citric acid cycle flux and are modulated by substrate supply. The described 13C-labeling strategy combined with an experimental setup that enables continuous monitoring of physiological parameters offers a unique model to clarify the link between metabolic alterations, cardiac dysfunction, and disease development.

energy metabolism; citric acid cycle; 13C mass isotopomer analysis; gas chromatography-mass spectrometry; isolated working perfused heart



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: C. Des Rosiers, Laboratory of Intermediary Metabolism, CHUM Research Center, Notre-Dame Hospital, 1560 Sherbrooke East, Rm. Y-3616, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H2L 4M1 (E-mail: christine.des.rosiers{at}umontreal.ca).




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