Literature DB >> 11181478

Genetic variation in angiotensin-converting enzyme does not prevent development of cardiac hypertrophy or upregulation of angiotensin II in response to aortocaval fistula.

G J Perry1, T Mori, C C Wei, X Y Xu, Y F Chen, S Oparil, P Lucchesi, L J Dell'Italia.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Experimental and clinical evidence suggests that angiotensin II may be an important mediator of cardiac hypertrophy in response to hemodynamic stress. We investigated the effect of genetic variation in angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) on the development of cardiac hypertrophy and left ventricular (LV) dysfunction in response to volume overload. METHODS AND
RESULTS: Male heterozygous ACE knockout (1/0) and wild-type (1/1) mice were studied 4 weeks after the creation of an aortocaval fistula (ACF). The LV weight/body weight ratio increased 74% in ACF versus sham-operated control mice but did not differ between genotypes. Echocardiographic circumferential stress versus rate-corrected velocity of circumferential shortening curves demonstrated depressed LV function in ACF versus sham-operated mice but no difference between genotypes. LV ACE activity was higher in 1/1 versus 1/0 mice and in ACF versus sham-operated mice, and it increased significantly more in the 1/1 versus the 1/0 mice after ACF (P<0.001 for effect of genotype, ACF/sham operation, and interaction term). LV angiotensin II was higher in ACF versus sham-operated mice but did not differ between genotypes, despite 3-fold higher LV ACE activity in ACF 1/1 versus ACF 1/0 mice.
CONCLUSIONS: ACE underexpression does not prevent cardiac hypertrophy or LV dysfunction in response to volume overload. LV angiotensin II is unaffected by ACE genotype, both at baseline and after volume overload, indicating that the heart can maintain angiotensin II levels across a broad range of genetic ACE variation under both physiological and pathophysiological conditions.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11181478     DOI: 10.1161/01.cir.103.7.1012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circulation        ISSN: 0009-7322            Impact factor:   29.690


  7 in total

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Authors:  Kirk R Hutchinson; Chandra Saripalli; Charles S Chung; Henk Granzier
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Review 3.  Myofilament dysfunction as an emerging mechanism of volume overload heart failure.

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4.  Intraluminal Drug Delivery to the Mouse Arteriovenous Fistula Endothelium.

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Journal:  J Vis Exp       Date:  2016-03-04       Impact factor: 1.355

5.  The mouse aortocaval fistula recapitulates human arteriovenous fistula maturation.

Authors:  Kota Yamamoto; Clinton D Protack; Masayuki Tsuneki; Michael R Hall; Daniel J Wong; Daniel Y Lu; Roland Assi; Willis T Williams; Nirvana Sadaghianloo; Hualong Bai; Tetsuro Miyata; Joseph A Madri; Alan Dardik
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Review 6.  Multifunctional Role of Chymase in Acute and Chronic Tissue Injury and Remodeling.

Authors:  Louis J Dell'Italia; James F Collawn; Carlos M Ferrario
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7.  Chymase uptake by cardiomyocytes results in myosin degradation in cardiac volume overload.

Authors:  Pamela C Powell; Chih-Chang Wei; Lianwu Fu; Betty Pat; Wayne E Bradley; James F Collawn; Louis J Dell'Italia
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  7 in total

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