Literature DB >> 15522275

Genetic enhancement of ventricular contractility protects against pressure-overload-induced cardiac dysfunction.

Xiao-Jun Du1, Lin Fang, Xiao-Ming Gao, Helen Kiriazis, Xinheng Feng, Elodie Hotchkin, Angela M Finch, Hervé Chaulet, Robert M Graham.   

Abstract

In response to pressure-overload, cardiac function deteriorates and may even progress to fulminant heart failure and death. Here we questioned if genetic enhancement of left ventricular (LV) contractility protects against pressure-overload. Transgenic (TG) mice with cardiac-restricted overexpression (66-fold) of the alpha(1A)-adrenergic receptor (alpha(1A)-AR) and their non-TG (NTG) littermates, were subjected to transverse aorta constriction (TAC)-induced pressure-overload for 12 weeks. TAC-induced hypertrophy was similar in the NTG and TG mice but the TG mice were less likely to die of heart failure compared to the non-TG animals (P <0.05). The hypercontractile phenotype of the TG mice was maintained over the 12-week period following TAC with LV fractional shortening being significantly greater than in the NTG mice (42+/-2 vs 29+/-1%, P <0.01). In the TG animals, 11-week beta-AR-blockade with atenolol neither induced hypertrophy nor suppressed the hypercontractile phenotype. The hypertrophic response to pressure-overload was not altered by cardiac alpha(1A)-AR overexpression. Moreover, the inotropic phenotype of alpha(1A)-AR overexpression was well maintained under conditions of pressure overload. Although the functional decline in contractility with pressure overload was similar in the TG and NTG animals, given that contractility was higher before TAC in the TG mice, their LV function was better preserved and heart failure deaths were fewer after induction of pressure overload.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15522275     DOI: 10.1016/j.yjmcc.2004.07.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mol Cell Cardiol        ISSN: 0022-2828            Impact factor:   5.000


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