Literature DB >> 12618232

Differential regulation of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase mediates gender-dependent catecholamine-induced hypertrophy.

Rajesh Dash1, Albrecht G Schmidt, Anand Pathak, Michael J Gerst, Danuta Biniakiewicz, Vivek J Kadambi, Brian D Hoit, William T Abraham, Evangelia G Kranias.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Exogenous catecholamine exposure has been associated with p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) and cardiac hypertrophy. In this study, we investigated the regulation of p38 MAPK in cardiac remodeling elicited by endogenous adrenergic mechanisms.
METHODS: Transgenic male and female mice with fourfold phospholamban (PLB) overexpression exhibited enhanced circulating norepinephrine (NE), as a physiological compensatory mechanism to attenuate PLB's inhibitory effects. This enhanced noradrenergic state resulted in left ventricular hypertrophy/dilatation and depressed function.
RESULTS: Male transgenics exhibited ventricular hypertrophy and mortality at 15 months, concurrent with cardiac p38 MAPK activation. Female transgenics, despite similar contractile dysfunction, displayed a temporal delay in p38 activation, hypertrophy, and mortality (22 months), which was associated with sustained cardiac levels of MAP Kinase Phosphatase-1 (MKP-1), a potent inhibitor of p38. At 22 months, decreases in cardiac MKP-1 were accompanied by increased levels of p38 activation. In vitro studies indicated that preincubation with 17-beta-estradiol induced high MKP-1 levels, which precluded NE-induced p38 activation.
CONCLUSION: These findings suggest that norepinephrine-induced hypertrophy is linked closely with p38 MAP kinase activation, which can be endogenously modulated through estrogen-responsive regulation of MKP-1 expression.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12618232     DOI: 10.1016/s0008-6363(02)00772-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cardiovasc Res        ISSN: 0008-6363            Impact factor:   10.787


  15 in total

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Review 3.  Gender Differences in Cardiac Hypertrophy.

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5.  Models of Gender Differences in Cardiovascular Disease.

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7.  N-acetylcysteine reverses cardiac myocyte dysfunction in a rodent model of behavioral stress.

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Review 10.  Influence of sex hormones and phytoestrogens on heart disease in men and women.

Authors:  Poornima Bhupathy; Christopher Dean Haines; Leslie Anne Leinwand
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