Metabolic Outcomes of Anaplerotic Dodecanedioic Acid Supplementation in Very Long Chain Acyl-CoA Dehydrogenase (VLCAD) Deficient Fibroblasts

  • Igor Radzikh
  • , Erica M Fatica
  • , Jillian Kodger
  • , Rohan Shah
  • , Ryan Pearce
  • , Yana Sandlers

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Very long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (VLCADD, OMIM 609575) is associated with energy deficiency and mitochondrial dysfunction and may lead to rhabdomyolysis and cardiomyopathy. Under physiological conditions, there is a fine balance between the utilization of different carbon nutrients to maintain the Krebs cycle. The maintenance of steady pools of Krebs cycle intermediates is critical for mitochondrial energy homeostasis especially in high-energy demanding organs such as muscle and heart. Even-chain dicarboxylic acids are established as alternative energy carbon sources that replenish the Krebs cycle by bypassing a defective β-oxidation pathway. Despite this, even-chain dicarboxylic acids are eliminated in the urine of VLCAD-affected individuals. In this study, we explore dodecanedioic acid (C12; DODA) supplementation and investigate its metabolic effect on Krebs cycle intermediates, glucose uptake, and acylcarnitine profiles in VLCAD-deficient fibroblasts. Our findings indicate that DODA supplementation replenishes the Krebs cycle by increasing the succinate pool, attenuates glycolytic flux, and reduces levels of toxic very long-chain acylcarnitines.
    Original languageAmerican English
    JournalMetabolites
    Volume11
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Aug 13 2021

    Keywords

    • Keywords: VLCAD deficiency; dodecandioic acid; acylcarnitines; Krebs cycle

    Disciplines

    • Life Sciences
    • Medicine and Health Sciences

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