A gene therapy targeting medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD) did not protect against diabetes-induced cardiac pathology.

Kate L Weeks; Helen Kiriazis; Glenn D Wadley; Emma I Masterman; Nicola M Sergienko; Antonia J A Raaijmakers; Adam J Trewin; Claudia A Harmawan; Gunes S Yildiz; Yingying Liu; Brian G Drew; Paul Gregorevic; Lea M D Delbridge; Julie R McMullen; Bianca C Bernardo
Abstract
Diabetic cardiomyopathy describes heart disease in patients with diabetes who have no other cardiac conditions but have a higher risk of developing heart failure. Specific therapies to treat the diabetic heart are limited. A key mechanism involved in the progression of diabetic cardiomyopathy is dysregulation of cardiac energy metabolism. The aim of this study was to determine if increasing the expression of medium-chain acyl-coenzyme A dehydrogenase (MCAD; encoded by Acadm), a key regulator of fatty acid oxidation, could improve the function of the diabetic heart. Male mice were administered streptozotocin to induce diabetes, which led to diastolic dysfunction 8 weeks post-injection. Mice then received cardiac-selective adeno-associated viral vectors encoding MCAD (rAAV6:MCAD) or control AAV and were followed for 8 weeks. In the non-diabetic heart, rAAV6:MCAD increased MCAD expression (mRNA and protein) and increased Acadl and Acadvl, but an increase in MCAD enzyme activity was not detectable. rAAV6:MCAD delivery in the diabetic heart increased MCAD mRNA expression but did not significantly increase protein, activity, or improve diabetes-induced cardiac pathology or molecular metabolic and lipid markers. The uptake of AAV viral vectors was reduced in the diabetic versus non-diabetic heart, which may have implications for the translation of AAV therapies into the clinic. KEY MESSAGES: The effects of increasing MCAD in the diabetic heart are unknown. Delivery of rAAV6:MCAD increased MCAD mRNA and protein, but not enzyme activity, in the non-diabetic heart. Independent of MCAD enzyme activity, rAAV6:MCAD increased Acadl and Acadvl in the non-diabetic heart. Increasing MCAD cardiac gene expression alone was not sufficient to protect against diabetes-induced cardiac pathology. AAV transduction efficiency was reduced in the diabetic heart, which has clinical implications.
Journal JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR MEDICINE (BERLIN, GERMANY)
ISSN 1432-1440
Published 21 Nov 2023
Volume
Issue
Pages
DOI 10.1007/s00109-023-02397-2
Type Journal Article
Sponsorship Diabetes Australia: Y19G-BERB; Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute: BF17013