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Dlat Enzyme Limits Fatty Acid Oxidation in HFpEF

March 14, 2026
in Medicine
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A groundbreaking study published in Nature Communications in 2026 reveals an unprecedented insight into the metabolic adaptations underlying heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), a condition notoriously challenging to diagnose and treat. The research spearheaded by Wang, Guo, Zhu, and colleagues sheds light on the role of the pyruvate metabolism enzyme dihydrolipoamide S-acetyltransferase (Dlat) and its impact on mitochondrial function—specifically, how it induces protein hyperacetylation in mitochondria that ultimately constrains fatty acid oxidation in the HFpEF heart. This discovery not only deepens our understanding of cardiac metabolism in disease states but also opens novel therapeutic avenues for a condition affecting millions worldwide.

HFpEF is characterized by impaired cardiac relaxation and stiffness despite a normal ejection fraction, differentiating it from other forms of heart failure. Until now, the metabolic mechanisms driving this dysfunction remained elusive, hampering the development of effective treatments. This study meticulously explores the intersection between pyruvate metabolism and mitochondrial regulation, focusing on post-translational modifications such as acetylation—a chemical change on proteins that can dramatically alter enzyme activity and cellular processes.

Central to this research is Dlat, a critical enzyme within the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDC) that catalyzes the conversion of pyruvate to acetyl-CoA, a pivotal metabolite feeding the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle. The authors identified that Dlat exerts more than its conventional roles: it acts as a driver of mitochondrial protein hyperacetylation, a modification that was observed to suppress mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation. This mechanism ultimately leads to an energy-deficient state within the cardiac muscle, contributing to the HFpEF pathological phenotype.

At the molecular level, hyperacetylation affects key components of mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation machinery, including enzymes responsible for beta-oxidation. By inducing hyperacetylation, Dlat appears to inhibit the efficient breakdown of fatty acids, the heart’s primary energy substrate under normal aerobic conditions. The resulting metabolic shift favors glucose metabolism, though this substrate switching comes at an energetic cost. The team demonstrated that this metabolic inflexibility exacerbates cardiac dysfunction observed in HFpEF, highlighting hyperacetylation as a potentially reversible pathological hallmark.

Using advanced proteomics techniques, the researchers mapped the acetylation landscape within mitochondria isolated from heart tissue exhibiting the HFpEF phenotype. Comparative analyses revealed a significant upsurge in acetyl-modified proteins, many of which align with enzymes integral to energy metabolism. This high-resolution mapping enabled the identification of hyperacetylated sites directly linked to the dampening of fatty acid oxidation pathways, providing compelling evidence for the central role of Dlat in this process.

Importantly, the study also dissected the upstream regulatory signals that govern Dlat’s acetyltransferase activity. The authors propose that alterations in the acetyl-CoA pool within mitochondria influence the enzymatic activity of Dlat, creating a feedback loop that sustains mitochondrial protein hyperacetylation. This metabolic crosstalk ultimately results in the suppression of fatty acid catabolism, reinforcing metabolic remodeling in the failing heart.

Through genetic and pharmacological manipulations in animal models, the authors demonstrated that modulating Dlat expression or activity can ameliorate HFpEF symptoms. Reducing Dlat levels or inhibiting its function attenuated mitochondrial protein hyperacetylation, restored fatty acid oxidation capacity, and improved cardiac function. These findings underscore Dlat as a promising therapeutic target, suggesting that interventions aimed at correcting acetylation imbalances could reverse metabolic defects in HFpEF.

The implications of these discoveries extend beyond heart failure, offering broader insight into mitochondrial biology and post-translational regulation of metabolism in chronic disease states. The identification of Dlat’s non-canonical role in regulating mitochondrial acetylation challenges the long-held notion of its exclusive function within pyruvate metabolism. This paradigm shift paves the way for future research into how mitochondrial enzymatic networks are rewired during pathological stress.

Moreover, this study expertly integrates cutting-edge metabolomics, molecular biology, and cardiac physiology to produce a comprehensive model of energy metabolism dysregulation in HFpEF. The multi-disciplinary approach strengthens the causal link between Dlat-mediated protein hyperacetylation and impaired fatty acid oxidation, setting a high standard for subsequent investigations seeking to understand metabolic remodeling in heart disease.

Clinically, these findings are highly consequential as HFpEF accounts for nearly half of all heart failure cases and disproportionately affects the elderly and patients with metabolic comorbidities like diabetes and obesity. Current treatment options for HFpEF are limited and primarily symptomatic. By targeting the metabolic underpinnings delineated in this research, novel drugs could emerge to improve cardiac energy efficiency, thereby enhancing patient outcomes.

Furthermore, the therapeutic strategies proposed by the authors involve modifying post-translational modifications—a relatively unexplored avenue in cardiovascular medicine. Acetylation-targeting compounds, including specific deacetylase activators or small molecules inhibiting Dlat’s abnormal acetyltransferase activity, may hold significant promise. Their translation from bench to bedside will depend on further characterization of safety and efficacy in preclinical and clinical trials.

This research also invites a re-examination of mitochondrial acetylation dynamics under physiological conditions. Understanding the balance between beneficial and maladaptive acetylation is essential for precisely manipulating these processes therapeutically. The identification of Dlat as a central modulator offers a focused target for such investigations, potentially influencing metabolic disease beyond cardiology.

In summary, the study by Wang et al. fundamentally expands our knowledge of cardiac metabolic remodeling in HFpEF by elucidating how Dlat-driven mitochondrial protein hyperacetylation restricts fatty acid oxidation. This mechanism contributes to energy deficits that compromise cardiac function. By pinpointing a reversible enzymatic process, the research charts a path toward metabolically focused therapies that could revolutionize the treatment of HFpEF and related disorders.

As the field moves forward, integrating these novel mechanistic insights with clinical phenotyping and biomarker development will be critical. Detecting early signs of aberrant mitochondrial acetylation could enable timely interventions before irreversible cardiac damage occurs. Moreover, the versatility of targeting mitochondrial metabolism underscores the broader applicability of these findings across a spectrum of metabolic diseases.

This landmark study not only illuminates the complex biochemical terrain of HFpEF but also exemplifies the power of molecular cardiology to unravel previously masked disease pathways. It is a shining example of how rigorous basic science coupled with translational ambition can yield discoveries with transformative potential for patient care worldwide.


Subject of Research: Metabolic remodeling in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), focusing on the role of the pyruvate metabolism enzyme Dlat in mitochondrial protein hyperacetylation and fatty acid oxidation.

Article Title: Pyruvate metabolism enzyme Dlat induces mitochondria protein hyperacetylation to limit fatty acid oxidation in the HFpEF heart.

Article References: Wang, Y., Guo, D., Zhu, J. et al. Pyruvate metabolism enzyme Dlat induces mitochondria protein hyperacetylation to limit fatty acid oxidation in the HFpEF heart. Nat Commun (2026). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-026-70703-w

Image Credits: AI Generated

Tags: cardiac energy metabolism in HFpEFDlat enzyme role in cardiac metabolismfatty acid oxidation impairment in heart failureheart failure with preserved ejection fraction metabolic adaptationsmitochondrial dysfunction in cardiac diseasemitochondrial protein hyperacetylation in HFpEFnovel treatments for heart failure with preserved ejection fractionpost-translational modifications in heart failureprotein acetpyruvate dehydrogenase complex regulationpyruvate metabolism enzyme in HFpEFtherapeutic targets for HFpEF
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