Myocardial metabolic flexibility is critical to ensuring the heart's capacity to maintain contraction and cellular functions under rapidly evolving environmental conditions. Although it is a tightly regulated process, loss of metabolic flexibility is often regarded as a contributing factor to heart failure. This study aims to determine the effects of the early response transcription factor nuclear receptor subfamily 4 group A member 2 (NR4A2) on cardiac metabolism and the resulting impact on left ventricular function. A multiomics approach combining the analysis of global ventricular gene expression, genome-wide NR4A2 binding, and untargeted metabolomics was used to track the molecular effects of cardiomyocyte-specific NR4A2 activation in male and female mice over time. Doppler echocardiography was performed in parallel to monitor changes in left ventricular function. We found that NR4A2 acts as a direct transcriptional activator of the genes encoding the glucose transporter type 4 and most glycolytic enzymes. The upregulation of glycolysis was accompanied by the inhibition of fatty acid β-oxidation and by activation of glutamine-dependent reductive carboxylation to promote the synthesis of phospholipids. This was further supported by NR4A2-dependent transcriptional regulation of key enzymes in the phosphatidic acid pathway. Rewiring of the Krebs cycle for biosynthetic purposes was followed by a progressive decline in left ventricular contractility. In conclusion, our results expose NR4A2 as a critical component of the cell regulatory machinery governing transcriptional reprogramming of cardiac metabolism under stress. These findings provide a conceptual framework illustrating how an acute adaptive metabolic response may become maladaptive on the long-term.NEW & NOTEWORTHY The plasticity of myocardial metabolism is regulated by a poorly understood network of transcription factors. We show that stress-activated nuclear receptor NR4A2 is a potent transcriptional activator of glycolysis in the mouse heart. Prolonged NR4A2 activation triggers a switch from oxidative to biosynthetic metabolism, accompanied by a progressive decline in left ventricular contractility. These findings provide a conceptual framework illustrating how an acute adaptive metabolic response may become maladaptive in the long-term.
Nuclear receptor subfamily 4 group a member 2 induces a Warburg-like effect and promotes phospholipids synthesis in the mouse heart.
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作者:Ashraf Sadia, Odogwu Dorcas, McPherson David D, Harmancey Romain
| 期刊: | Physiological Genomics | 影响因子: | 2.500 |
| 时间: | 2026 | 起止号: | 2026 Apr 1; 58(4):181-194 |
| doi: | 10.1152/physiolgenomics.00319.2025 | ||
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