| Literature DB >> 19434491 |
Stephan E Lehnart1, Lars S Maier, Gerd Hasenfuss.
Abstract
Heart failure (HF) is characterized by molecular and cellular defects which jointly contribute to decreased cardiac pump function. During the development of the initial cardiac damage which leads to HF, adaptive responses activate physiological countermeasures to overcome depressed cardiac function and to maintain blood supply to vital organs in demand of nutrients. However, during the chronic course of most HF syndromes, these compensatory mechanisms are sustained beyond months and contribute to progressive maladaptive remodeling of the heart which is associated with a worse outcome. Of pathophysiological significance are mechanisms which directly control cardiac contractile function including ion- and receptor-mediated intracellular signaling pathways. Importantly, signaling cascades of stress adaptation such as intracellular calcium (Ca(2+)) and 3'-5'-cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) become dysregulated in HF directly contributing to adverse cardiac remodeling and depression of systolic and diastolic function. Here, we provide an update about Ca(2+) and cAMP dependent signaling changes in HF, how these changes affect cardiac function, and novel therapeutic strategies which directly address the signaling defects.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19434491 PMCID: PMC2772965 DOI: 10.1007/s10741-009-9146-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heart Fail Rev ISSN: 1382-4147 Impact factor: 4.214
Fig. 1a Physiology of excitation-contraction (EC) coupling. An incoming action potential (AP) rapidly depolarizes the cell membrane potential (V m) in phase 0 through opening of voltage-dependent Na+ channels (NaV1.5). Subsequently, EC coupling is initiated through the opening of voltage-dependent L-type Ca2+ channels (CaV1.2) and the plasma membrane Ca2+ influx current (I Ca). I Ca activates ryanodine receptors (RyR2s) and intracellular Ca2+ release from sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) stores, also known as Ca2+ induced Ca2+ release (CICR). CICR is followed by extrusion of Ca2+ from the cytosol into the SR by Ca2+ pumps (SERCA2) and to the extracellular compartment by the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger (NCX) operating in its forward mode (3 Na+ in for each Ca2+ out), which creates an electrogenic inward current. SR Ca2+ leak is inhibited by the calstabin2 (Cab2) subunit which stabilizes the RyR2 closed state. The SERCA2 pump rate is inhibited by the phospholamban (PLN) subunit in its dephosphorylated state. Ca2+ release and uptake occur cyclically during each heart beat and represent 60–90% of Ca2+ signaling during EC coupling depending on the species studied. b EC coupling abnormalities in CPVT. RyR2 missense mutations significantly increase the propensity for intracellular Ca2+ leak in resting cardiomyocytes (during diastole) with filled SR Ca2+ stores. Stimulation of β-adrenergic receptors (β-ARs) during stress adaptation results in RyR2 and PLN phosphorylation by PKA (indicated by ⊗) which increases SR Ca2+ release and uptake, respectively. However, RyR2 mutations (as indicated by green star) in the PKA phosphorylated Ca2+ release channel lead to partial calstabin2 depletion, a significant gain-of-function defect of RyR2, and intracellular Ca2+ leak. RyR2 Ca2+ leak activates depolarizing transient inward currents (I TI) supposedly through abnormal forward mode NCX activity. If I TI currents reach a critical threshold of membrane potential instability in phase 4 of the cardiac AP, Na+ channels are activated leading to delayed after depolarizations (DADs) which underly triggered activity. c EC coupling abnormalities in HF. HF is a chronic hyperadrenergic state which results in downregulation of β-AR signaling and reduced intracellular cAMP synthesis. However, maintained hyperadrenergic stimulation of β-ARs during HF results in chronic RyR2 PKA hyperphosphorylation (indicated by large ⊗), depletion of the stabilizing calstabin2 subunits as well as other components of the channel complex including phosphodiesterase 4D3 (PDE4D3). PDE4D3 depletion causes a chronically reduced cAMP hydrolysis in the channel complex and contributes to RyR2 PKA hyperphosphorylation induced intracellular Ca2+ leak. On the other hand, PLN is chronically PKA hypophosphorylated (indicated by small ⊗) creating constitutively inhibited state of SERCA2 and reduced SR Ca2+ uptake. Additionally, NCX expression is significantly increased leading to abnormally increased Ca2+ extrusion to the extracellular side and depletion of intracellular Ca2+ stores. Despite Ca2+ store depletion, DADs and triggered activity are frequent in HF possibly due to increased SR Ca2+ leak and proarrhythmogenic inward NCX and late I Na,L currents
Major calcium handling abnormalities in the failing heart
| Gene | Physiological function | Pathophysiology in HF | Genetic syndromes |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Na+/Ca2+ exchange |
| n/a |
| Forward mode | Contractile dysfunction | ||
| Reverse mode | Pro-arrhythmogenic | ||
|
| Ryanodine receptor isoform 2 | Intracellular Ca2+ leak | CPVT (ARVC2 ?) |
| Intracellular Ca2+ release | Contractile dysfunction | Missense mutations | |
| HF, SSS, AVND | |||
| Contractile activation in systole | Pro-arrhythmogenic | Deletion mutation | |
|
| SERCA2a pump | Loss-of-function | Darier disease |
| Intracellular SR Ca2+ uptake | Depressed SR Ca2+ uptake | ||
| Muscle relaxation in diastole | Depressed contraction and relaxation | ||
|
| Phospholamban | Gain-of-function | Dilated cardiomyopathy, early onset |
| Constitutive inhibition of SERCA2a pump function | Increase in ratio of PLN:SERCA2a results in decreased SERCA2a function | Missense and deletion mutations | |
| PKA and/or CaMKII phosphorylation of PNL increases SR Ca2+ uptake and contractile function | PLN hypophosphorylation is associated with decreased SR Ca2+ uptake and contractile dysfunction |
ARVC2 arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy type 2, AVND atrioventricular node dysfunction, CPVT catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia, SSS sick sinus node, n/a not available
Clinical and novel drug rationales to treat HF
| Target | Drug | Advantage | Disadvantage |
|---|---|---|---|
| NCX transporter | |||
| Forward mode | SEA0400 | Reduced infarct size | OTA |
| Reverse mode | SEA0400, KB-R7943 | n/a | Negative inotropic? |
| RyR2 channel | |||
| Phosphorylation | β-Blockers | Survival, progression | Indirect mechanism |
| ACE inhibitors | Survival, progression | Indirect mechanism | |
| Pore block | Tetracaine | n/a | OTA; n/a |
| Stabilization | JTV519 | Specificity | OTA |
| S107 | Specificity | n/a | |
| SERCA2 pump | |||
| Stimulation | Gingerol | Specificity | Toxicity; n/a |
| Overexpression | AAV-SERCA2a | Specificity | Gene therapy |
OTA off-target activity, n/a not available
Fig. 2Representative traces of aequorin-based Ca2+ signals and corresponding isometric forces from human nonfailing (top) and failing (bottom) myocardial muscle preparations. Upper panel: Nonfailing myocardium shows post-rest potentiation of the intracellular Ca2+ transient and force development which increases from 10 to 120 s rest period. Lower panel: Failing myocardium shows depressed post-rest intracellular Ca2+ transient and force development after 120 s rest. Steady-state pre-rest signals are shown on the left of each trace; first and second post-rest signals are shown afterwards; post-rest signals represent 10 s (left) and 120 s (right), dimensions as indicated. Reproduced with permission from the Journal of Clinical Investigation (Pieske et al. [80])