| Literature DB >> 25922656 |
Omar Ayaz1, Susan Ellen Howlett2.
Abstract
The incidence of cardiovascular disease rises dramatically with age in both men and women. Because a woman's risk of cardiovascular disease rises markedly after the onset of menopause, there has been growing interest in the effect of estrogen on the heart and its role in the pathophysiology of these diseases. Much less attention has been paid to the impact of testosterone on the heart, even though the levels of testosterone also decline with age and low-testosterone levels are linked to the development of cardiovascular diseases. The knowledge that receptors for all major sex steroid hormones, including testosterone, are present on individual cardiomyocytes suggests that these hormones may influence the heart at the cellular level. Indeed, it is well established that there are male-female differences in intracellular Ca(2+) release and contraction in isolated ventricular myocytes. Growing evidence suggests that these differences arise from effects of sex steroid hormones on processes involved in intracellular Ca(2+) homeostasis. This review considers how myocardial contractile function is modified by testosterone, with a focus on the impact of testosterone on processes that regulate Ca(2+) handling at the level of the ventricular myocyte. The idea that testosterone regulates Ca(2+) handling in the heart is important, as Ca(2+) dysregulation plays a key role in the pathogenesis of a variety of different cardiovascular diseases. A better understanding of sex hormone regulation of myocardial Ca(2+) homeostasis may reveal new targets for the treatment of cardiovascular diseases in all older adults.Entities:
Keywords: Aging; Excitation-contraction coupling; Gonadectomy; Orchiectomy
Year: 2015 PMID: 25922656 PMCID: PMC4411792 DOI: 10.1186/s13293-015-0027-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Sex Differ ISSN: 2042-6410 Impact factor: 5.027
Figure 1Major gonadal pathways for testosterone biosynthesis. Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) secreted from the hypothalamus releases luteinizing hormone (LH) from the pituitary. LH binds to LH receptors on Leydig cells, stimulates Gs, and activates the cAMP/protein kinase A (PKA) pathway. PKA promotes the transport of cholesterol into mitochondria and increases transcription of genes involved in testosterone biosynthesis. Cholesterol is converted to pregnenolone, which diffuses into the endoplasmic reticulum for testosterone biosynthesis via ∆4 and ∆5 pathways. Testosterone is formed by 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase 3 (HSD17β3) in the ∆4 pathway and by 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (HSD3β) in the ∆5 pathway. Testosterone is converted to dihydrotestosterone (DHT) by 5α-reductase, and some are aromatized to 17ß-estradiol.
Influence of chronic testosterone withdrawal on myocardial contractility
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| LVDP | Langendorff | ↔ | 2 | Rat | [ |
| ↔ | 9 | Rat | [ | ||
| a↓ | 16 | Rat | [ | ||
| Working heart | b↓ | 3 | Rat | [ | |
| b↓ | 10 | Rat | [ | ||
| LVEDP | Millar catheterization | ↔ | 10–11 | Mouse | [ |
| Langendorff | ↔ | 2 | Rat | [ | |
| Working heart | b↓ | 3 | Rat | [ | |
| b↓ | 10 | Rat | [ | ||
| +dP/dT | Millar catheterization | ↔ | 10–11 | Mouse | [ |
| Langendorff | ↔ | 9 | Rat | [ | |
| a↓ | 16 | Rat | [ | ||
| −dP/dT | Millar catheterization | ↔ | 10–11 | Mouse | [ |
| Langendorff | ↔ | 9 | Rat | [ | |
| a↓ | 16 | Rat | [ | ||
| Working heart | b↓ | 3 | Rat | [ | |
| b↓ | 10 | Rat | [ |
aEffect of GDX is reversed by testosterone replacement. bFunctional change in the working heart model was only observed at high left atrial pressures.
Impact of chronic androgen treatment and GDX on resting and action potentials
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| RMP | bTestosterone | 4 | Ventricular muscle | ↔ | Rat | [ |
| cDihydrotestosterone | 13 | Ventricular myocyte | ↔ | Mouse | [ | |
| AP amplitude | bTestosterone | 4 | Ventricular muscle | ↔ | Rat | [ |
| APD50 | bTestosterone | 4 | Ventricular muscle | ↔ | Rat | [ |
| cDihydrotestosterone | 13 | Ventricular myocyte | ↓ | Mouse | [ | |
| APD90/95 | bTestosterone | 4 | Ventricular muscle | ↑ | Rat | [ |
| cDihydrotestosterone | 13 | Ventricular myocyte | ↓ | Mouse | [ | |
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| RMP | GDX | 4 | Ventricular muscle | ↔ | Rat | [ |
| 11–15 | Ventricular myocyte | ↔ | Mouse | [ | ||
| AP amplitude | GDX | 4 | Ventricular muscle | ↔ | Rat | [ |
| APD50 | GDX | 4 | Ventricular muscle | ↑ | Rat | [ |
| 11–15 | Ventricular myocyte | ↑ | Mouse | [ | ||
| APD90/95 | GDX | 4 | Ventricular muscle | ↔ | Rat | [ |
| 11–15 | Ventricular myocyte | ↑ | Mouse | [ | ||
aAll experiments used paced tissues and myocytes from male animals only. bTestosterone treatment with 5 mg/kg/day. cDihydrotestosterone treatment with a 7.5-mg pellet.
Influence of gonadectomy on sarcolemmal proteins and currents
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| Ultra-rapid delayed rectifier K+ current (IKur) | aGDX | 13 | ↓ peak IKur | Mouse | [ |
| 13 | ↓ Kv1.5 protein | Mouse | [ | ||
| GDX | 16 | ↔ Kv1.5 protein | Rat | [ | |
| Transient outward K+ current (ITO) | GDX | 13 | ↔ peak ITO | Mouse | [ |
| 13 | ↔ Kv4.2/4.3 protein | Mouse | [ | ||
| Steady state K+ current (ISS) | GDX | 13 | ↔ peak ISS | Mouse | [ |
| 13 | ↔ Kv1.2 protein | Mouse | [ | ||
| Inward rectifier K+ current (IK1) | GDX | 13 | ↔ peak IK1 | Mouse | [ |
| 13 | ↔ Kir2.1 protein | Mouse | [ | ||
| 16 | ↓ Kir2.1 mRNA | Rat | [ | ||
| 16 | ↔ Kir2.2 mRNA | Rat | [ | ||
| 16 | ↔ Kir2.3 mRNA | Rat | [ | ||
| Slow delayed rectifier K+ current (IKs) | GDX | 8 | ↓ peak IKs | Rabbit | [ |
| L-type Ca2+ current (ICa-L)/ dihydropyridine receptor (DHPR) | GDX | 9 | ↔ peak ICa-L | Rabbit | [ |
| bGDX | 2 | ↓ DHPR mRNA | Rat | [ | |
| 16 | ↓ DHPR mRNA | Rat | [ | ||
| Na + -Ca2+ exchanger | GDX | 10 | ↔ NCX activity | Rat | [ |
| 9 | ↔ NCX activity | Rat | [ | ||
| 2 | ↔ NCX protein | Rat | [ | ||
| 10 | ↓ NCX protein | Rat | [ | ||
| 10–11 | ↑ NCX protein | Mouse | [ | ||
| bGDX | 2 | ↓ NCX mRNA | Rat | [ | |
| 16 | ↓ NCX mRNA | Rat | [ |
aIndicates that the effect of GDX was reversed by treatment with dihydrotestosterone. bIndicates that the effect of GDX was reversed by treatment with testosterone.
Gonadectomy modifies cardiomyocyte Ca release and contraction
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| Cell shortening | Peak contraction | ↔ | 1 | 0.5 | 16 | Rat | [ |
| a↓ | 0.5–2 | 0.5 | 2 | Rat | [ | ||
| Relaxation rate | aSlowed | 1 | 0.5 | 16 | Rat | [ | |
| 0.5–2 | 0.5 | 2 | Rat | [ | |||
| Intracellular Ca2+ | Peak Ca2+ transient | ↔ | 1 | 0.2 | 9 | Rat | [ |
| a↓ | 0.5–2 | 0.5 | 2 | Rat | [ | ||
| Ca2+ transient decay rate | aSlowed | 0.5–2 | 0.5 | 2 | Rat | [ | |
| 1 | 0.2 | 9 | Rat | [ |
aIndicates that the effect of GDX was reversed by treatment with testosterone in studies by Curl et al. [99] and Golden et al. [91].
Effect of gonadectomy on Ca handling by the sarcoplasmic reticulum
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| SR Ca2+ release | ↔ RyR2 protein | 2 | Rat | [ |
| a ↓ RyR-mediated 45Ca2+ flux | 9 | Rat | [ | |
| SR Ca2ccps stores | ↔ Calsequestrin protein | 10-11 | Mouse | [ |
| ↔ Calreticulin protein | 10-11 | Mouse | [ | |
| a↓ SR Ca2+ content | 9 | Rat | [ | |
| SERCA2a | ↔ SERCA2a protein | 2 | Rat | [ |
| 10 | Rat | [ | ||
| 10-11 | Mouse | [ | ||
| ↔ SERCA activity | 10 | Rat | [ | |
| a↓ SERCA activity | 9 | Rat | [ | |
| PLB | ↔ PLB protein | 2 | Rat | [ |
| 10 | Rat | [ | ||
| 9 | Rat | [ | ||
| 10-11 | Mouse | [ | ||
| a↓ PLB Thr17 phosphorylation | 10-11 | Mouse | [ | |
| 10 | Rat | [ | ||
| ↓ PLB Ser16 phosphorylation | 10-11 | Mouse | [ | |
| ↔ PLB Ser16 phosphorylation | 10 | Rat | [ |
aIndicates that the effect of GDX was reversed by treatment with testosterone in studies by Tsang et al. [76] and Witayavanitkul et al. [96].
Figure 2Impact of GDX on intracellular Ca2+-handling mechanisms in ventricular myocytes isolated from rodent hearts. APD is prolonged by GDX, due to a decrease in repolarizing K+ currents (IKur) and a reduction in the expression of Kv1.5. Reduced Ca2+ influx along with smaller Ca2+ sparks attenuates SR Ca2+ release. Ca2+ transient decay is slowed by longer APs and slower SR Ca2+ uptake mediated by a decrease in phosphorylation of PLB by CaMKII (and possibly PKA). Peak contractions are attenuated through smaller peak Ca2+ transients and a decrease in maximal myofilament responsiveness to Ca2+. Contractions are slowed because SR Ca2+ uptake is reduced and the slower β-MHC isoform predominates. Whether NCX activity or expression is affected by GDX is not yet clear.