Alterations in excitation–contraction coupling and elevated intracellular sodium (Nai) are hallmarks of pathological cardiac remodelling that underline contractile dysfunction. In addition, changes in cardiac metabolism are observed in cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure (HF) that lead to a mismatch in ATP supply and demand, contributing to poor prognosis. A link between Nai and altered metabolism has been proposed but is not well understood. Many mitochondrial enzymes are stimulated by mitochondrial calcium (Camito) during contraction, thereby sustaining production of reducing equivalents to maintain ATP supply. This stimulation is thought to be perturbed when cytosolic Nai is high due to increased Camito efflux, potentially compromising ATPmito production and leading to metabolic dysregulation. Increased Nai has been previously shown to affect Camito; however, whether Nai elevation plays a causative role in energetic mismatching in the hypertrophied and failing heart remains unknown. In this review, we discuss the relationship between elevated Nai, NaK ATPase dysregulation and the metabolic phenotype in the contexts of pathological hypertrophy and HF and their link to metabolic flexibility, capacity (reserve) and efficiency that are governed by intracellular ion homeostasis. The development of non-invasive analytical techniques using nuclear magnetic resonance able to probe metabolism in situ in the functioning heart will enable a better understanding of the underlying mechanisms of Nai overload in cardiac pathophysiology. They will lead to novel insights that help to explain the metabolic contribution towards these diseases, the incomplete rescue observed with current therapies and a rationale for future energy-targeted therapies.
Introduction
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of mortality worldwide with its incidence projected to rise significantly in the immediate future. There is a clear need for improved understanding of underlying cellular mechanisms which can aid the development of more effective treatments as well as novel techniques for early diagnosis. There is a convincing evidence that myocardial intracellular Na (Nai) overload along with metabolic derangement are two important and interconnected pathophysiological features of hypertrophy and heart failure (HF). Na ion homeostasis is regulated by many transporters and membrane pumps [1]. Na/K ATPase (NKA) and its key regulatory protein phospholemman (PLM) play a crucial role in cardiomyocyte transmembrane ion transport and contractility, such that transgenic PLM3SA mice, in which PLM is rendered unphosphorylatable, have chronically elevated Nai and an increased susceptibility to hypertrophy-induced dysfunction [2]. In addition, due to the high ATP demand required for pump activity and its sarcolemmal localization, there is evidence for an association between NKA and metabolism with its ATP supply thought to be supplied preferentially by glycolysis [3–5]. More recent studies have suggested that cytosolic Na regulation also plays an important role in linking mitochondrial Ca-dependent ATP production to mechanical activity and ATP demand due to contractile work [6,8]. Nevertheless, the extent that these metabolic alterations (mismatch in ATP supply–demand) reflect chronic cellular remodelling or arise as a consequence of Nai elevation is not well understood.
Na pump and Nai regulation in cardiac hypertrophy
In most larger mammalian hearts, with a long action potential, Nai is maintained at ∼4–8 mM [9,10]. In murinae (rats and mice), intracellular Na is significantly elevated (10–20 mM) and this elevated Na is associated with many other adaptations in excitation–contraction (EC) coupling, including a short action potential, a larger recirculating Ca fraction, a dependence on SR Ca release, reduced NCX (sarcolemmal sodium–calcium exchanger) activity, rest potentiation and a negative force–frequency staircase [6].
The cell exploits the energy in the transmembrane Na gradient to drive a plethora of Na-dependent membrane transporters moving ions, substrates, amino acids etc. either into (co-transporters/symports) or out of (exchangers/antiports) the cell (Figure 1). The importance of this trans-sarcolemmal inward Na gradient means that its dissipation in various pathologies such as ischaemia/reperfusion [11], hypertrophy or HF [12,13] is highly detrimental. While some of the Na transport processes are electro-neutral, some are electrogenic and hence both respond to, and contribute to, the membrane potential. Most notably, voltage-gated Na channels are crucially important in generating the upstroke of the cardiac action potential. While there are a large number of Na influx pathways, there is only a single quantitatively significant Na efflux pathway responsible for maintaining the transmembrane Na gradient — the Na/K ATPase or Na/K pump (NKA) [14].
Major Nai influx and efflux pathways and metabolic pathways involved in ATP supply.
The activity of the NKA is regulated by FXYD1, or PLM, the principal sarcolemmal target of protein kinases A and C (Figure 2) [15]. As such, PLM is required for the dynamic control of Nai during increases in heart rate or during disease and plays a vital role in Na regulation during ‘fight or flight’ [14]. Under physiological conditions, NKA is the only quantitatively significant efflux pathway of Na out of the myocyte (NCX and Na/HCO3/Cl symporter, in principle, can reverse and efflux Na) [16] (Figure 1).
Schematic depiction of a structure–function relationship (regulation) between PLM and Na pump.
A hallmark of cardiac hypertrophy and failure is an elevation of Nai. There is an abundant literature on this phenomenon, although absolute values of measured Nai are often dissimilar, probably owing to methodological differences as summarized in Table 1. Elevation in Nai may contribute to the negative force–frequency relationship, slowed relaxation and arrhythmias [17]. While a component of the elevation of Nai may reflect an increase in Na influx [10], there is a large body of evidence showing that Na/K pump function may also be compromised [2,12,13,18]. Specifically, in cardiac hypertrophy, many studies have shown that NKA pump function, and/or expression, is reduced [2,12,13,18,19]. Cardiac Nai can also be elevated by several other factors such as hypothermia [16] or by increased intracellular pH via enhanced NHE (sodium–proton exchanger) activity, for example, following ischaemia–reperfusion injury [20].
Species . | [Na]i (mM) . | Method used . | Reference . |
---|---|---|---|
Human | 8.0 | SBFI (sodium-binding benzofuran isophthalate)-loaded muscle strips paced at 0.25 Hz | [17] |
Human LVH | 14.2 | Na-selective microelectrodes; muscle strips at rest | [67] |
Human failing | 12.1 | SBFI-loaded muscle strips paced at 0.25 Hz | [17] |
Human MVD | 11.8 | Na-selective microelectrodes; muscle strips at rest | [67] |
Sheep | 5–6.4 | Na-selective microelectrodes; Purkinje fibres at 1 Hz and at rest | [68,69] |
5.8–7.9 | Na-selective microelectrodes; muscle strips at rest | [70] | |
Dog | 8.9–10.4 | Na-selective microelectrodes; Purkinje fibres at rest and 1 Hz | [71] |
Guinea pig | 4.7–8.0 | Na-selective microelectrodes; muscle strips at rest | [67,70,72,73,74] |
6.4 | 23Na NMR; isolated perfused heart | [75] | |
5.1–5.2 | SBFI-loaded myocytes at rest | [9,76] | |
Guinea pig LVH | 12.1 | Na-selective microelectrodes; muscle strips at rest | [67] |
12.8 | 23Na NMR; isolated perfused heart | [75] | |
Guinea pig failing | 16.8 | SBFI-loaded myocytes at rest | [77] |
Ferret | 7.8 | Na-selective microelectrodes; muscle strips at rest | [78] |
Ferret RVH | 8.0 | Na-selective microelectrodes; muscle strips at rest | [78] |
Rabbit | 7.2 | Na-selective microelectrodes; muscle strips at 0.5 Hz | [6,10] |
3.8–4.5 | SBFI-loaded myocytes at rest | [10,79] | |
Rat | 12.7 | Na-selective microelectrodes; muscle strips at 0.5 Hz | [6] |
8.5–30 | Na-selective microelectrodes; myocytes at rest | [80] | |
5.1–21 | SBFI-loaded myocytes at rest | [9,10,79,81] | |
17.5 | 23Na NMR; isolated perfused arrested hearts | [82] | |
Mouse | 11.6 | 23Na NMR; isolated perfused heart | [51] |
Mouse | 14 | SBFI-loaded myocytes at rest | [2] |
Mouse LVH | 23 | SBFI-loaded myocytes at rest | [2] |
Species . | [Na]i (mM) . | Method used . | Reference . |
---|---|---|---|
Human | 8.0 | SBFI (sodium-binding benzofuran isophthalate)-loaded muscle strips paced at 0.25 Hz | [17] |
Human LVH | 14.2 | Na-selective microelectrodes; muscle strips at rest | [67] |
Human failing | 12.1 | SBFI-loaded muscle strips paced at 0.25 Hz | [17] |
Human MVD | 11.8 | Na-selective microelectrodes; muscle strips at rest | [67] |
Sheep | 5–6.4 | Na-selective microelectrodes; Purkinje fibres at 1 Hz and at rest | [68,69] |
5.8–7.9 | Na-selective microelectrodes; muscle strips at rest | [70] | |
Dog | 8.9–10.4 | Na-selective microelectrodes; Purkinje fibres at rest and 1 Hz | [71] |
Guinea pig | 4.7–8.0 | Na-selective microelectrodes; muscle strips at rest | [67,70,72,73,74] |
6.4 | 23Na NMR; isolated perfused heart | [75] | |
5.1–5.2 | SBFI-loaded myocytes at rest | [9,76] | |
Guinea pig LVH | 12.1 | Na-selective microelectrodes; muscle strips at rest | [67] |
12.8 | 23Na NMR; isolated perfused heart | [75] | |
Guinea pig failing | 16.8 | SBFI-loaded myocytes at rest | [77] |
Ferret | 7.8 | Na-selective microelectrodes; muscle strips at rest | [78] |
Ferret RVH | 8.0 | Na-selective microelectrodes; muscle strips at rest | [78] |
Rabbit | 7.2 | Na-selective microelectrodes; muscle strips at 0.5 Hz | [6,10] |
3.8–4.5 | SBFI-loaded myocytes at rest | [10,79] | |
Rat | 12.7 | Na-selective microelectrodes; muscle strips at 0.5 Hz | [6] |
8.5–30 | Na-selective microelectrodes; myocytes at rest | [80] | |
5.1–21 | SBFI-loaded myocytes at rest | [9,10,79,81] | |
17.5 | 23Na NMR; isolated perfused arrested hearts | [82] | |
Mouse | 11.6 | 23Na NMR; isolated perfused heart | [51] |
Mouse | 14 | SBFI-loaded myocytes at rest | [2] |
Mouse LVH | 23 | SBFI-loaded myocytes at rest | [2] |
ATP supply–demand matching in the heart
Fine control of ATP-generating pathways in mitochondria and cytosol are critical to meet the energy demands of cardiac muscle. Supply must be matched to demand as failure to provide an adequate amount of ATP causes a decrease in cellular free energy leading to mechanical failure. The heart utilizes more energy than any other organ — with 2% of its total ATP reserves consumed per beat, it turns over its total ATP pool in less than 1 min and utilizes 6 kg of ATP every day [21–23]. This enormous energy demand is related primarily to ATP-dependent processes driving EC coupling [24]. About 70–75% of total intracellular ATP is used for force generation powering work output, with the remaining 25–30% is used for basal metabolism [25–27]. In terms of force generation, it is estimated that the actomyosin ATPase accounts for 76%, SERCA (sarcoendoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase) 15% and NKA for 9% of ATP utilization [27].
To synthesize the ATP required for normal function, the adult heart converts chemical energy primarily stored in free fatty acids (FFAs) (60–90%) and pyruvate (derived from glucose and lactate 10–40%) into mechanical energy for contraction [28]. The delivery of metabolic substrates, their selection, uptake and oxidation to generate acetyl-CoA for tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle entry and ATP generation in the electron transport chain (ETC) comprises three stages of myocardial ATP supply as summarized in Figure 1. However, cardiac workload varies constantly, including several-fold increase in cardiac output during exercise, thus requiring rapid and continuous matching of ATP supply to demand. This renders the heart a metabolic omnivore, giving it a high degree of substrate flexibility to rapidly switch substrate preference and utilization [28]. The apparent opposing relationship between carbohydrates and FFAs in the heart is, in part, due to the Randle (glucose–fatty acid) cycle, thus optimizing energy supply by avoiding energetic inefficiency and ‘waste’ [29].
The failing heart
First identified in the early 20th century, and now a well-established energy starvation hypothesis, it is proposed that maladaptive metabolic remodelling precedes, initiates and maintains adverse contractile dysfunction in hypertrophy and HF [23,24]. Advances in analytical technologies and understanding of metabolic mechanisms have improved our insights into the phenomenon and helped to classify metabolic alterations leading to myocardial energy starvation into those related to substrate utilization, intermediary metabolism and energetics. Using in vivo31P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), Neubauer [23] found that the myocardial phosphocreatine-to-ATP ratio (PCr:ATP) can be used as a reliable prognostic indicator of dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) where 44% of DCM patients with a PCr:ATP of <1.6 died of cardiovascular causes vs. 5% with a PCr:ATP of >1.6. Cardiac hypertrophy induces a switch in substrate utilization from dominant FFA oxidation towards carbohydrate utilization which is similar to the foetal metabolic phenotype [24,30–32]. The onset of this switch (and thereby the stage at which it could potentially be targeted therapeutically) is currently debated as numerous studies suggest that ATP levels are sustained during the early stages of remodelling and only decrease (30–40%) during advanced stages of HF [33–37]. There have also been numerous preclinical studies as well as clinical data inferring mitochondrial respiratory impairment (complex activities and/or altered expression of the ETC complexes, ATP synthase and adenine nucleotide translocase) in hypertrophy and HF [38–40].
EC coupling, specifically Ca handling by SERCA, has also been linked to the time course of metabolic alterations during hypertrophy: SERCA preferentially uses glycolytically derived ATP over OXPHOS (oxidative phosphorylation) [41] and therefore switching to a more glycolytic phenotype during hypertrophy, and HF could reflect increased SERCA activity to sustain adequate Ca homeostasis. NKA pump also requires glycolysis for normal Na homeostasis, potentially due to preferential fuelling of NKA by cytosolic glycolytically derived ATP and its spatial proximity to the pump [4,42,43]. However, the substrate switch and energetic deficit alone cannot explain Na accumulation observed in hypertrophy and failure. The debate is similar to the arguments about Na elevation in ischaemia and revolves around energetic inhibition of the NKA: the substrate switch from fatty acids to glucose leads to impaired energetic reserve and decline in cytosolic ATP, thus limiting the energy supply to the pump leading to Na accumulation. However, it has been previously shown that even during severe metabolic stress such as ischaemia, intracellular Na rises at a time when the total ATP concentration greatly exceeds the Km for the pump (∼0.1–0.8 mmol/l) and the free energy of ATP exceeds that required for pump activity (∼44 kJ/mol) [44].
Myocardial Nai elevation and metabolic remodelling: the chicken or the egg?
In spite of significant evidence to support the concomitance of Nai overload and metabolic remodelling during cardiac hypertrophy and HF, there have been very few studies investigating the interaction between these pathophysiological events. Using isolated rat mitochondria, Iwai et al. [45] demonstrated that increasing extramitochondrial Na (Naex) from physiological (12.5 mM) to supraphysiological (≥25 mM) concentrations significantly reduced state 3 respiration, suggesting reduced mitochondrial ATP supply as well as reduced mitochondrial membrane potential. However, the present study offered no insights into the mechanism underlying the effect of Nai overload on whole cell metabolism.
A series of studies focusing on the mitochondrial transport of Na and Ca and its relationship with mitochondrial ATP production showed a stimulation of mitochondrial ATP production by Ca; however, the mitochondrial Ca transport kinetics and its regulation by Nai are still not completely understood [45–48]. The majority of Camito uptake is by the Camito uniporter (MCU), while the Na/Camito exchanger (NCLX) is thought to be the predominant mechanism for Ca extrusion [49] (Figure 1). The impact of Nai on Cam has been elucidated by Cox and Matlib [46] using fura-2 to measure Cam in isolated cardiac mitochondria from healthy rabbits. Mitochondria incubated with increasing concentrations of Naex using NaCl in the physiological range showed reduced Camito as well as reduced NADH production and state 3 respiration. On the other hand, inhibition of NCLX with three inhibitors (from highest to lowest potency: CGP-37157 > clonazepam > d-cis-diltizam) and the MCU inhibitor ruthenium red substantially increased Cam, NADH production and state 3 respiration in a dose-dependent manner. This study supported the findings of Iwai et al. [45] and the hypothesis that Nai overload dysregulates ATP supply–demand matching.
However, this study did not provide information on the beat-to-beat kinetics of Cam transport and its relation to mitochondrial energy production.
Isolated mitochondria experiments should be treated with caution, given the measurements are performed in the absence of important ATP sinks (myosin ATPase, NKA and SERCA) and substrate utilization pathways (glycolysis and β-oxidation). More recently, Maack et al. [50] used isolated guinea pig cardiomyocytes to measure Cai and Cam during systole and diastole as well as NADH, thereby providing insights into the beat-to-beat regulation of Cam during increased Nai. This study showed that both systolic and diastolic Cam are significantly reduced by Nai elevation. Correspondingly, the percentage of NAD(H) in the reduced form was maintained at ∼62% in the control group, but was significantly lower in the high Nai group. In spite of these changes in Ca and [NADH], Nai elevation did not affect the mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨm). Furthermore, NCLX inhibition by CGP-37157 was shown to significantly elevate diastolic Cam. As these effects were not altered by ruthenium red inhibition of the MCU, it is likely a consequence of increased Cam extrusion via NCLX on a beat-to-beat basis. The outcome of this study further supported the argument that Nai is an important regulator of cardiac bioenergetics. However, it remains unclear whether this is truly reflective of a regulatory mechanism in the beating heart and, if so, which metabolic pathways are most affected by Nai overload.
Measuring Nai overload in the beating heart
The studies examining the impact of Nai on mitochondrial ATP provision published to date are subject to major experimental caveats, thus making direct mechanistic translation to in situ perfused and in vivo myocardium difficult. Specifically, these studies lack integrated experimental approaches as they have been limited to isolated organelles and cells at subphysiological temperatures with limited metabolic readouts.
To elucidate the importance of the link between Nai and ATP supply–demand matching in the beating heart, experimental models are required either ex vivo or in vivo where the heart is perfused under physiologically relevant conditions and where Nai elevation can be induced and reliably measured. To elucidate concomitant changes in substrate metabolism or energetics, it is also necessary to be able to quantify a wide range of metabolites involved in energy homeostasis in these models. We have previously applied and validated techniques able to measure intracellular Nai in the Langendorff perfused mouse [51,52] or rat heart preparations [53] using NMR.
23Na NMR has historically been used to distinguish the small intra Nai versus large extracellular Nae pools employing paramagnetic shift reagents such as Tm(DOTP) [thulium (III) 1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetra(methylenephosphonate)] [51] to separate the two. However, these reagents are efficient chelators of Ca and Mg leading to modified ion homeostasis and reduced cardiac contractility [51]. As a result, shift reagents exhibit significant toxicity precluding their use in vivo and question their validity for measuring Naiex vivo. In contrast, multiple quantum-filtered 23Na NMR, which exploits the quadrupolar property of the 23Na nucleus, has shown potential to probe intra and extracellular pools of Na in the absence of shift reagent and therefore under more physiological conditions [54,55]. We have previously investigated the use of these techniques in the perfused mouse heart where we were able to measure elevated intracellular Na in response to the cardiac glycoside ouabain as well as in response to modified buffer compositions, for example, in the absence of K, Ca or Mg. We were further able to verify previous studies showing that the PLM3SA mouse has a chronic elevation of basal Nai compared with wild-type hearts. Crucially, NMR is also able to probe cardiac energetics by 31P NMR in the same hearts where it is possible to measure the concentrations of ATP, PCr, Pi, intracellular pH as well as PCr:ATP ratio and thereby derive estimates of the Gibb's free energy. Newly emerging techniques such as metabolomics also enable end-point measurements of metabolites in snap frozen extracted myocardial tissue and coronary effluent using either high-resolution NMR or mass spectrometry [53,56,57].
Figure 3 shows the example NMR spectra of two different Langendorff perfused mouse hearts acquired using our previously reported NMR protocols. The left-hand panel displays data from a wild-type control mouse heart with normal baseline Nai, while the right-hand panel displays data from a hypertrophic mouse heart subject to aortic constriction [2]. The dry weight of the control heart was 30 mg while that of the banded heart was 58 mg measured at the end of the experiment. Figure 3a,b shows the 31P NMR spectra acquired with baseline function. Figure 3c,d shows the triple-quantum-filtered 23Na NMR spectra acquired with baseline function. Figure 3e,f shows the conventional single-quantum-filtered 23Na NMR spectra acquired at the end of the experiment following infusion of 5 mM Tm(DOTP) to shift the large extracellular Nae signal and enable quantification of the small intracellular Nai signal. Our previous work suggested that the TQF signal in Figure 3c,d consists of a contribution both from the intracellular and extracellular pools of Na, but that the large bulk isotropic signal from the buffer is largely suppressed. These experiments highlight the ability of such NMR techniques to probe both cardiac energetics using 31P NMR and Nai using triple-quantum-filtered 23Na NMR in the same preparation [51]. The data presented here also highlight experimental challenges in quantifying Nai in these hearts. Total myocardial Nai is clearly elevated under conditions of hypertrophy; however, so too is the tissue mass and intracellular volume [51]. Absolute quantification of such data is subject to many experimental assumptions including a phenomenological scaling factor for the NMR observability of Nai and a scaling factor to estimate intracellular volume. Despite obvious limitations in the methodology, NMR offers unique insights into Na ion homeostasis and cardiac energetics under both physiological and pathophysiological conditions. Additionally, there has resurgence in interest applying MRI techniques for imaging Na distribution in vivo [58]. 23Na is the second most sensitive nucleus for in vivo detection by NMR after 1H; however, sensitivity and spatial resolution remain an issue as well as the ability to separate intra- versus extracellular pools of Na which is also challenging.
Representative 31P NMR spectra, triple-quantum-filtered 23Na and conventional 1D 23Na NMR spectra from perfused control and hypertrophied mouse hearts.
Therapeutic potential
Nai has inadvertently been a known therapeutic target in HF for the last 200 years, and the established example of in vivo use of Nai modulation is the administration of cardiac glycosides (such as digoxin) which are potent inhibitors of NKA. Cardiac glycosides elevate Nai and lead to a positive inotropic response (due to release of Ca) that can vary considerably between species. They are steroidal-like compounds found endogenously under normal conditions (e.g. ouabain, digoxin and bufalin) and are elevated in patients with renal failure [59] and HF [60]. However, their clinical use for the treatment of HF is a cautionary tale and limited due to their energetically costly as well as pro-arrhythmic properties [61]. Nevertheless, they remain useful tool for elevating Nai in experimental models [51–53,56,62]. In spite of the substantial in vitro and preclinical evidence to support the targeting of the substrate switch therapeutically, there has been limited successes that have been translated into the clinic. For example, sodium dichloroacetate (pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase inhibitor) appeared to improve contractile performance in 10 HF patients, but a vehicle control group was not included in this study [63,64]. Trimetazadine is currently prescribed for longer term inhibition of FFA oxidation and has been shown to reduce angina and improve cardiac function in patients with DCM [65,66], although these improvements were modest. Given the limited clinical success of targeting substrate utilization to date, it is important to continue to evaluate the potential of targeting other aspects of cardiac metabolism, such as intermediary pathways leading to ATP supply. This could also help identify the role metabolic remodelling plays in transition from pathological hypertrophy towards HF. The question remains whether early prevention of myocardial Nai elevation could either prevent the origin or alter the course of metabolic derangement in pathological hypertrophy leading to energy starvation and cardiac death. This hypothesis warrants further study including the ongoing development of therapeutics that target these interconnected pathophysiological events.
Abbreviations
- Camito
mitochondrial calcium
- DCM
dilated cardiomyopathy
- EC
excitation–contraction
- ETC
electron transport chain
- FFA
free fatty acids
- HF
heart failure
- MCU
mitochondrial calcium uniporter
- Naex
extramitochondrial sodium
- Nai
intracellular sodium
- NCLX
mitochondrial sodium–calcium exchanger
- NCX
sarcolemmal sodium–calcium exchanger
- NKA
sodium/potassium ATPase
- NMR
nuclear magnetic resonance
- OXPHOS
oxidative phosphorylation
- PCr:ATP
phosphocreatine-to-ATP ratio
- PLM
phospholemman
- SBFI
sodium-binding benzofuran isophthalate
- SERCA
sarcoendoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase
- Tm(DOTP)
thulium (III) 1,4,7,10-Tetraazacyclododecane-1,4,7,10-tetra(methylenephosphonate)
Author Contribution
D.A., T.R.E., B.A.O.B. and M.J.S. conceived and designed research. D.A. drafted the manuscript. D.A. and T.R.E. prepared figures. D.A., B.A.O.B., T.R.E. and M.J.S. edited, revised the manuscript and approved the final version of the manuscript.
Funding
This work was supported by a British Heart Foundation Programme Grant [RG/12/4/29426] to M.J.S. and King's College London British Heart Foundation Centre of Research Excellence [RE/08/003]. The research was supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre based at Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust and King's College London; the Centre of Excellence in Medical Engineering funded by the Wellcome Trust and EPSRC under grant number [WT 088641/Z/09/Z] and the King's College London and UCL Comprehensive Cancer Imaging Centre funded by the CRUK and EPSRC in association with the MRC and DoH (England). The views expressed are those of the author and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR or the Department of Health.
Acknowledgments
The authors thank Anja Karlstaedt, Heinrich Taegtmeyer, David Sanchez-Tatay, Marina Basalay, Andrew Atkinson, Alpesh Thakker and Daniel Tennant for their contributions to the Nai metabolism studies.
Competing Interests
The Authors declare that there are no competing interests associated with the manuscript.