Background-Cardiac hypertrophy underlies arrhythmias and sudden death, for which mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) activity has recently been implicated. We sought to establish the sequence of ionic events that link the initiating insult and MR to hypertrophy development. Methods and Results-Using whole-cell, patch-clamp and quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction techniques on right ventricular myocytes of a myocardial infarction (MI) rat model, we examined the cellular response over time. One week after MI, no sign of cellular hypertrophy was found, but action potential duration (APD) was lengthened. Both an increase in Ca 2ϩ current (I Ca ) and a decrease in K ϩ transient outward current (I to ) underlay this effect. Consistently, the relative expression of mRNA coding for the Ca 2ϩ channel ␣1C subunit (Ca v 1.2) increased, and that of the K ϩ channel K v 4.2 subunit decreased. Three weeks after MI, AP prolongation endured, whereas cellular hypertrophy developed. I Ca density, Ca v 1.2, and K v 4.2 mRNA levels regained control levels, but I to density remained reduced. Long-term treatment with RU28318, an MR antagonist, prevented this electrical remodeling. In a different etiologic model of abdominal aortic constriction, we confirmed that APD prolongation and modifications of ionic currents precede cellular hypertrophy. Conclusions-Electrical remodeling, which is triggered at least in part by MR activation, is an initial, early cellular response to hypertrophic insults.
Myocardial ischemic disease is the major cause of death worldwide. After myocardial infarction, reperfusion of infracted heart has been an important objective of strategies to improve outcomes. However, cardiac ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) is characterized by inflammation, arrhythmias, cardiomyocyte damage, and, at the cellular level, disturbance in Ca 2+ and redox homeostasis. In this study, we sought to determine how acute inflammatory response contributes to reperfusion injury and Ca 2+ homeostasis disturbance after acute ischemia. Using a rat model of I/R, we show that circulating levels of TNF-α and cardiac caspase-8 activity were increased within 6 h of reperfusion, leading to myocardial nitric oxide and mitochondrial ROS production. At 1 and 15 d after reperfusion, caspase-8 activation resulted in S-nitrosylation of the RyR2 and depletion of calstabin2 from the RyR2 complex, resulting in diastolic sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca 2+ leak. Pharmacological inhibition of caspase-8 before reperfusion with Q-LETD-OPh or prevention of calstabin2 depletion from the RyR2 complex with the Ca 2+ channel stabilizer S107 ("rycal") inhibited the SR Ca 2+ leak, reduced ventricular arrhythmias, infarct size, and left ventricular remodeling after 15 d of reperfusion. TNF-α-induced caspase-8 activation leads to leaky RyR2 channels that contribute to myocardial remodeling after I/R. Thus, early prevention of SR Ca 2+ leak trough normalization of RyR2 function is cardioprotective.
Chronic CO exposure promotes a pathological phenotype of cardiomyocytes in the absence of underlying cardiomyopathy. The less severe phenotype in vivo suggests a role for compensatory mechanisms. Arrhythmia propensity may derive from intracellular Ca(2+) overload.
Rationale: Revascularization of injured, ischemic, and regenerating organs is essential to restore organ function.In the postinfarct heart, however, the mechanisms underlying the formation of new coronary arteries are poorly understood.Objective: To study vascular remodeling of coronary arteries after infarction.
Methods and Results:
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.