| Literature DB >> 25848038 |
Catherine K Hathaway1, Ruriko Grant1, John R Hagaman1, Sylvia Hiller1, Feng Li1, Longquan Xu1, Albert S Chang1, Victoria J Madden1, C Robert Bagnell1, Mauricio Rojas2, Hyung-Suk Kim1, Bingruo Wu3, Bin Zhou3, Oliver Smithies4, Masao Kakoki4.
Abstract
We have generated low-expressing and high-expressing endothelin-1 genes (L and H) and have bred mice with four levels of expression: L/L, ∼20%; L/+, ∼65%; +/+ (wild type), 100%; and H/+, ∼350%. The hypomorphic L allele can be spatiotemporally switched to the hypermorphic H allele by Cre-loxP recombination. Young adult L/L and L/+ mice have dilated cardiomyopathy, hypertension, and increased plasma volumes, together with increased ventricular superoxide levels, increased matrix metalloproteinase 9 (Mmp9) expression, and reduced ventricular stiffness. H/+ mice have decreased plasma volumes and significantly heavy stiff hearts. Global or cardiomyocyte-specific switching expression from L to H normalized the abnormalities already present in young adult L/L mice. An epithelial sodium channel antagonist normalized plasma volume and blood pressure, but only partially corrected the cardiomyopathy. A superoxide dismutase mimetic made superoxide levels subnormal, reduced Mmp9 overexpression, and substantially improved cardiac function. Genetic absence of Mmp9 also improved cardiac function, but increased superoxide remained. We conclude that endothelin-1 is critical for maintaining normal contractile function, for controlling superoxide and Mmp9 levels, and for ensuring that the myocardium has sufficient collagen to prevent overstretching. Even a modest (∼35%) decrease in endothelin-1 gene (Edn1) expression is sufficient to cause cardiac dysfunction.Entities:
Keywords: amiloride; extracellular matrix; reactive oxygen species; sodium retention; tempol
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25848038 PMCID: PMC4413291 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1504557112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205