Literature DB >> 21700928

Reversibility of adverse, calcineurin-dependent cardiac remodeling.

Jeff M Berry1, Vien Le, David Rotter, Pavan K Battiprolu, Bennett Grinsfelder, Paul Tannous, Jana S Burchfield, Michael Czubryt, Johannes Backs, Eric N Olson, Beverly A Rothermel, Joseph A Hill.   

Abstract

RATIONALE: Studies to dissect the role of calcineurin in pathological cardiac remodeling have relied heavily on murine models, in which genetic gain- and loss-of-function manipulations are initiated at or before birth. However, the great majority of clinical cardiac pathology occurs in adults. Yet nothing is known about the effects of calcineurin when its activation commences in adulthood. Furthermore, despite the fact that ventricular hypertrophy is a well-established risk factor for heart failure, the relative pace and progression of these 2 major phenotypic features of heart disease are unknown. Finally, even though therapeutic interventions in adults are designed to slow, arrest, or reverse disease pathogenesis, little is known about the capacity for spontaneous reversibility of calcineurin-dependent pathological remodeling.
OBJECTIVE: We set out to address these 3 questions by studying mice engineered to harbor in cardiomyocytes a constitutively active calcineurin transgene driven by a tetracycline-responsive promoter element. METHODS AND
RESULTS: Expression of the mutant calcineurin transgene was initiated for variable lengths of time to determine the natural history of disease pathogenesis, and to determine when, if ever, these events are reversible. Activation of the calcineurin transgene in adult mice triggered rapid and robust cardiac growth with features characteristic of pathological hypertrophy. Concentric hypertrophy preceded the development of systolic dysfunction, fetal gene activation, fibrosis, and clinical heart failure. Furthermore, cardiac hypertrophy reversed spontaneously when calcineurin activity was turned off, and expression of fetal genes reverted to baseline. Fibrosis, a prominent feature of pathological cardiac remodeling, manifested partial reversibility.
CONCLUSIONS: Together, these data establish and define the deleterious effects of calcineurin signaling in the adult heart and reveal that calcineurin-dependent hypertrophy with concentric geometry precedes systolic dysfunction and heart failure. Furthermore, these findings demonstrate that during much of the disease process, calcineurin-dependent remodeling remains reversible.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21700928      PMCID: PMC3164792          DOI: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.110.228452

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circ Res        ISSN: 0009-7330            Impact factor:   17.367


  42 in total

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Journal:  Circ Res       Date:  2004-11-11       Impact factor: 17.367

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Authors:  Richard B Devereux; Kristian Wachtell; Eva Gerdts; Kurt Boman; Markku S Nieminen; Vasilios Papademetriou; Jens Rokkedal; Katherine Harris; Peter Aurup; Björn Dahlöf
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Review 3.  Inhibition of hypertrophy is a good therapeutic strategy in ventricular pressure overload.

Authors:  Gabriele G Schiattarella; Joseph A Hill
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Authors:  Christopher H George; Dimitris Parthimos; Nicole C Silvester
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5.  Cardiac CaM Kinase II genes δ and γ contribute to adverse remodeling but redundantly inhibit calcineurin-induced myocardial hypertrophy.

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6.  High throughput phenotyping of left and right ventricular cardiomyopathy in calcineurin transgene mice.

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7.  Temporal dynamics of cardiac hypertrophic growth in response to pressure overload.

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8.  STIM1-dependent store-operated Ca²⁺ entry is required for pathological cardiac hypertrophy.

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Review 9.  Non-proliferative and Proliferative Lesions of the Cardiovascular System of the Rat and Mouse.

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Review 10.  Pathological ventricular remodeling: mechanisms: part 1 of 2.

Authors:  Jana S Burchfield; Min Xie; Joseph A Hill
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2013-07-23       Impact factor: 29.690

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