The angiotensin II type 1 (AT1) receptor has a crucial role in load-induced cardiac hypertrophy. Here we show that the AT1 receptor can be activated by mechanical stress through an angiotensin-II-independent mechanism. Without the involvement of angiotensin II, mechanical stress not only activates extracellular-signal-regulated kinases and increases phosphoinositide production in vitro, but also induces cardiac hypertrophy in vivo. Mechanical stretch induces association of the AT1 receptor with Janus kinase 2, and translocation of G proteins into the cytosol. All of these events are inhibited by the AT1 receptor blocker candesartan. Thus, mechanical stress activates AT1 receptor independently of angiotensin II, and this activation can be inhibited by an inverse agonist of the AT1 receptor.
Left ventricular (LV) diastolic pressure-volume (P-V) relations arise from a complex interplay of active decay of force (i.e., relaxation), passive elastic myocardial properties, and time-varying inflow across the mitral orifice. This study was designed to quantify the passive properties of the intact ventricle and the effects of elastic recoil by separating filling from relaxation with a method of LV volume clamping with a remote-controlled mitral valve. Eleven open-chest fentanyl-anesthetized dogs were instrumented with aortic and mitral flow probes, LV and left atrium micromanometers, and a remote-controlled mitral valve. We prevented complete (end-systolic volume clamping) or partial filling at different times in diastole. The ventricle thus relaxed completely at different volumes, and we generated P-V coordinates for the passive ventricle that included negative, as well as positive, values of pressure. We then estimated ventricular volumes from ventricular weight in eight dogs, using regression equations based on data in the literature, to determine the equilibrium volume (V0), that is, volume at zero transmural pressure, in the working ventricle. We abandoned the traditional exponential approach and characterized by the P-V relation with a logarithmic approach that included maximum LV volume (Vm), minimum volume (Vd), and stiffness parameters (Sp and Sn) for the positive (p) and negative (n) phases: Pp = -Sp In[(Vm - V)/(Vm - V0)] and Pn = Sn In[(V - Vd)/(V0 - Vd)]. With this formulation, the chamber compliance, dP/dV, is normalized by the LV operating volume, and Sp and Sn are size-independent chamber stiffness parameters with the units of stress. In eight ventricles with LV weight = 131 +/- 20 g, Vm = 116 +/- 18 ml, V0 = 37 +/- 6 ml, and Vd = 13 +/- 2 ml, stiffness Sp = 14.6 mm Hg and Sn = 5.1 mm Hg were determined from the slopes of the log-linearized equations. Also, the duration of LV relaxation is increased by the process of ventricular filling (161 +/- 31 msec, filling versus 108 +/- 36 msec, nonfilling, measured from dP/dtmin, p less than 0.0001). We conclude that volume clamping is a useful method of studying restoring forces and that the logarithmic approach is conceptually and quantitatively useful in characterizing the passive properties of the intact ventricle.
Our group identified angiotensin II type 1 (AT1) receptor-associated protein (ATRAP) in a yeast two-hybrid screen for proteins that bind to the carboxyl-terminal cytoplasmic domain of the AT1. In this work, we characterize ATRAP as a transmembrane protein localized in intracellular trafficking vesicles and plasma membrane that functions as a modulator of angiotensin II-induced signal transduction. ATRAP contains three hydrophobic domains at the amino-terminal end of the protein, encompassing the amino acid residues 14-36, 55-77, and 88-108 and a hydrophilic cytoplasmic carboxyl-terminal tail from residues 109-161. Endogenous and transfected ATRAP cDNA shows a particulate distribution; electron microscopy reveals the presence of ATRAP in prominent perinuclear vesicular membranes; and colocalization analysis by immunofluorescence shows that ATRAP colocalizes in an intracellular vesicular compartment corresponding to endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi, and endocytic vesicles. Real-time tracking of ATRAP vesicles shows constitutive translocation toward the plasma membrane. Using epitope-tagged forms of ATRAP at either the amino or carboxyl end of the molecule, we determined the orientation of the amino end as being outside the cell. Mutant forms of ATRAP lacking the carboxyl end are unable to bind to the AT1 receptor, leading to the formation of prominent perinuclear vesicle clusters. Functional analysis of the effects of ATRAP on angiotensin II-induced AT1 receptor signaling reveals a moderate decrease in the generation of inositol lipids, a marked decrease in the angiotensin II-stimulated transcriptional activity of the c-fos promoter luciferase reporter gene, and a decrease in cell proliferation.
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