Literature DB >> 11356634

Abnormal calcium and protein kinase C-epsilon signaling in hypertrophied atrial tumor myocytes (AT-1 cells).

R Kline1, T Jiang, X Xu, V O Rybin, S F Steinberg.   

Abstract

Cardiac hypertrophy leads to contractile dysfunction and altered hormone responsiveness through incompletely understood mechanisms. Atrial tumor (AT-1) myocytes (AT-1 cells) are a cardiomyocyte lineage that proliferates but hypertrophies when proliferation is prevented with mitomycin C. Because both states maintain a highly differentiated phenotype, AT-1 cells were used to explore the signaling pathways that accompany and/or contribute to hypertrophic cardiomyocyte growth. Mitomycin C-induced AT-1 cell enlargement is associated with a pronounced increase in the amplitude and the duration of both electrically stimulated calcium transients and endothelin receptor-dependent calcium responses. Studies with caffeine indicate that the intracellular pool of releasable calcium is similar in control and hypertrophied AT-1 cells. This agrees with the results of Northern analyses that show similar steady-state levels of transcripts encoding the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca-ATPase (and higher levels of transcripts encoding the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger) in hypertrophied AT-1 cells, relative to proliferating control cultures. However, immunoblot analyses reveal a marked increase in the expression of protein kinase C (PKC)-epsilon (a critical intermediate in the signaling pathway for endothelin receptor-dependent modulation of intracellular calcium) during AT-1 cell hypertrophy; the abundance of other PKC isoforms is not changed. Collectively, these results identify reciprocal regulation between calcium/PKC signaling and hypertrophic growth. The evidence that AT-1 cell hypertrophy leads to abnormalities in calcium regulation and specific changes in PKC-epsilon expression that alter endothelin receptor responsiveness supports the notion that pathophysiological changes in PKC-epsilon abundance lead to functionally important changes in hormonal modulation of cardiomyocyte function.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11356634     DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.2001.280.6.H2761

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol        ISSN: 0363-6135            Impact factor:   4.733


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  4 in total

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