| Literature DB >> 28936433 |
Takuro Numaga-Tomita1,2, Sayaka Oda1,2, Tsukasa Shimauchi1,3, Akiyuki Nishimura1,2, Supachoke Mangmool4, Motohiro Nishida1,2,3,5.
Abstract
Cardiac stiffness, caused by interstitial fibrosis due to deposition of extracellular matrix proteins, is thought as a major clinical outcome of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). Canonical transient receptor potential (TRPC) subfamily proteins are components of Ca2+-permeable non-selective cation channels activated by receptor stimulation and mechanical stress, and have been attracted attention as a key mediator of maladaptive cardiac remodeling. How TRPC-mediated local Ca2+ influx encodes a specific signal to induce maladaptive cardiac remodeling has been long obscure, but our recent studies suggest a pathophysiological significance of channel activity-independent function of TRPC proteins for amplifying redox signaling in heart. This review introduces the current understanding of the physiological and pathophysiological roles of TRPCs, especially focuses on the role of TRPC3 as a positive regulator of reactive oxygen species (PRROS) in heart. We have revealed that TRPC3 stabilizes NADPH oxidase 2 (Nox2), a membrane-bound reactive oxygen species (ROS)-generating enzyme, by forming stable protein complex with Nox2, which leads to amplification of mechanical stress-induced ROS signaling in cardiomyocytes, resulting in induction of fibrotic responses in cardiomyocytes and cardiac fibroblasts. Thus, the TRPC3 function as PRROS will offer a new therapeutic strategy for the prevention or treatment of HFpEF.Entities:
Keywords: Ca2+; NADPH oxidase; canonical transient receptor potential; cardiac fibrosis; cardiac remodeling; reactive oxygen species
Year: 2017 PMID: 28936433 PMCID: PMC5594069 DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2017.00056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cardiovasc Med ISSN: 2297-055X
Involvement of TRPC channels in cardiomyopathy.
| Gene | Species | Model | Expression and/or function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TRPC1 | Human | Failing heart | Increased expression of mRNA | ( |
| Mouse | Univentricular pressure overload | Increased expression of mRNA | ||
| Mouse | Pressure overload | Contributed to background Ca2+ entry and hypertrophy and fibrosis | ( | |
| Rat | Spontaneous hypertensive | Increased mRNA expression and involved in LV | ( | |
| rat | hypertrophy | |||
| Mouse | MI | Increased expression of mRNA | ( | |
| Rat | Abdominal aortic banding | Increased protein abundance | ( | |
| Rat | Neonatal cardiomyocytes | Knockdown inhibits agonist-induced hypertrophic responses | ||
| Mouse | Aged mdx mouse | Increased protein abundance | ( | |
| Mouse | Dominant negative NRSF transgene | Increased protein abundance | ( | |
| TRPC3 | Mouse | Pressure overload | TRPC3-knockout suppressed cardiac fibrosis and accumulation of oxidative stress | ( |
| Human | Failing heart | Increased expression of mRNA | ( | |
| Mouse | Overexpression and chronic agonist treatment | Coupled to NCX1 and involved in arrhythmia | ( | |
| Mouse | Cardiac CA-Gαq-transgene | Increased expression and involved in hypertrophy and arrhythmia | ( | |
| Mouse | MI | Increased expression of mRNA | ( | |
| Mouse | Pressure overload | Double knockout with TRPC6 suppressed cardiac remodeling | ( | |
| Dog | Tachypacing-induced heart | Increased protein abundance and reduction of atrial | ( | |
| failure | remodeling by Pyr3 treatment | |||
| Human | Atrial fibrillation patient | Increased protein abundance | ||
| Goat | Atrial fibrillation model by repetitive burst pacing | Increased protein abundance | ||
| Mouse | Dilated cardiomyopathy (MLP-KO) | Inhibition of TRPC3 suppressed dilated cardiomyopathy and aberrant ROS production | ( | |
| Mouse | Pressure overload | Inhibition of TRPC3 suppressed cardiac hypertrophy | ( | |
| Rat | Adult cardiomyocytes | Overexpression of TRPC3 increased apoptosis in response to ischemia-reperfusion | ( | |
| Rat | Neonatal cardiomyocytes | TRPC3 knockdown reduces PE-induced ANP and BNP expression without affecting cell size and beating frequency | ( | |
| Rat | Neonatal cardiomyocytes | Knockdown of TRPC3 suppressed Ang II-induced hypertrophic responses | ( | |
| Mouse | Cardiomyocyte-specific transgene | Cardiomyopathy and increased cardiac hypertrophy by pressure-overload and Ang II/PE treatment | ( | |
| Rat | Neonatal cardiomyocytes | ET-1, PE, FBS treatment increased the protein abundance | ( | |
| Rat | Pressure overload or isoproterenol treatment | Increased protein abundance | ||
| Mouse | Cardiac CA-calcineurin transgene | Increased protein abundance | ||
| SHHF rat | Hypertension | Increased protein abundance | ||
| TRPC4 | Human | Failing heart | Increased expression of mRNA | ( |
| Mouse | Pressure overload | Contributed to background Ca2+ entry and hypertrophy and fibrosis | ( | |
| Mouse | MI | Increased expression of mRNA. Ectopic expression of dominant negative TRPC4 increased basal myocyte contractility and reduced hypertrophy and cardiac structural and functional remodeling after MI while increasing survival | ( | |
| TRPC6 | Human | Failing heart | Increased expression of mRNA | ( |
| Mouse | Univentricular pressure overload | Increased expression of mRNA | ||
| Mouse | Cardiac CA-Gαq-transgene | Increased expression and involved in hypertrophy and arrhythmia | ( | |
| Mouse | MI | Increased expression of mRNA | ( | |
| Mouse | Pressure overload | Double knockout with TRPC3 suppressed cardiac remodeling | ( | |
| Mouse | Duchenne muscular dystrophy myocytes | Gene deletion or selective drug blockade of TRPC6 reversed the phenotype of excessive stress-stimulated contractility and arrhythmia | ( | |
| Mouse | Isoproterenol stimulation | TRPC6 suppression by Klotho reduced cardiac remodeling | ( | |
| Mouse | Pressure overload | Increase protein abundance | ( | |
| Mouse | Pressure overload | Phosphorylation of TRPC6 by cGMP-PKG pathway prevented cardiac hypertrophy | ( | |
| Mouse | Ang II treatment or TRPC6 overexpression | ANP-induced TRPC6 by phosphorylation protects heart from cardiac hypertrophy | ( | |
| Rat | Neonatal cardiomyocytes and cardiac fibroblast | ET-1 treatment increased mRNA and involved in NFAT activation and Gα12/13-mediated hypertrophy | ( | |
| Human | Failing heart | Increased expression of mRNA | ( | |
| Mouse | Pressure overload and endothelin treatment | Increased expression of mRNA | ||
| Rat | Neonatal cardiomyocytes | Knockdown of TRPC6 suppressed Ang II-induced hypertrophic responses | ( | |
| TRPC7 | Rat | Dahl salt-sensitive rat | Increased expression of mRNA | ( |
LV, left ventricular; NRSF, neuron-restrictive silencer factor; NCX1, Na.
Cardiac phenotype of canonical transient receptor potential (TRPC) knockout mice.
| Knockout mouse | Phenotype | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| TRPC1 | No effect on Ang II-induced cardiac hypertrophy | ( |
| Reduced pathological cardiac hypertrophy by double knockout with TRPC4 | ||
| TRPC3 | Resistant to pressure-overload-induced cardiac remodeling | ( |
| Reduced ischemia–reperfusion (I/R) injury by triple knockout with TRPC6 and TRPC7 | ( | |
| TRPC4 | No effect on Ang II-induced cardiac hypertrophy | ( |
| Reduced pathological cardiac hypertrophy by double knockout with TRPC4 | ||
| TRPC5 | No further reduction of pathological cardiac hypertrophy to that of double knockout of TRPC1/C4 | ( |
| TRPC6 | Resistant to pressure-overload induced cardiac remodeling | ( |
| Reduced I/R injury by triple knockout with TRPC3 and TRPC7 | ( | |
| TRPC7 | Reduced I/R injury by triple knockout with TRPC3 and TRPC6 | ( |
Figure 1Involvement of TRPC3 in the activation of NADPH oxidase 2 (Nox2). (A) TRPC3-mediated Ca2+ influx recruits and activates protein kinase C (PKC) which phosphorylates p47phox and evokes Nox2 enzymatic activation. (B) Schematic illustration of the domain structure of TRPC3. TRPC3 interacts with Nox2 through the C-terminal region. Numbers represent the positions of amino acids from first methionine.
Figure 2Physical interaction with TRPC3 prevents NADPH oxidase 2 (Nox2) from proteasome-dependent downregulation. In physiological condition, level of Nox2 expression is kept low by proteasomal degradation. Without interaction with p22phox, actively gp91phox is degraded. By physical interaction with TRPC3, both gp91phox and p22phox are protected from proteasomal degradation, which leads to excess expression of Nox2 enzyme on the plasma membrane.
Figure 3Aberrant reactive oxygen species (ROS) production by TRPC3–NADPH oxidase 2 (Nox2) coupling evokes cardiac fibrosis. In pathological conditions, TRPC3 protein abundance is increased, which leads to Nox2 protein stabilization. This positive regulation of Nox2 induces accumulation of excessive Nox2 complex on the plasma membrane. The ROS production mediated by TRPC3–Nox2 axis activates RhoA in both cardiomyocytes and cardiac fibroblast activated by mechanical stress and TGFβ, respectively, leading to cardiac fibrosis.