| Literature DB >> 30283343 |
Zizheng Kee1, Xenia Kodji1, Susan D Brain1.
Abstract
Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) is a highly potent vasoactive peptide released from sensory nerves, which is now proposed to have protective effects in several cardiovascular diseases. The major α-form is produced from alternate splicing and processing of the calcitonin gene. The CGRP receptor is a complex composed of calcitonin like receptor (CLR) and a single transmembrane protein, RAMP1. CGRP is a potent vasodilator and proposed to have protective effects in several cardiovascular diseases. CGRP has a proven role in migraine and selective antagonists and antibodies are now reaching the clinic for treatment of migraine. These clinical trials with antagonists and antibodies indicate that CGRP does not play an obvious role in the physiological control of human blood pressure. This review discusses the vasodilator and hypotensive effects of CGRP and the role of CGRP in mediating cardioprotective effects in various cardiovascular models and disorders. In models of hypertension, CGRP protects against the onset and progression of hypertensive states by potentially counteracting against the pro-hypertensive systems such as the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) and the sympathetic system. With regards to its cardioprotective effects in conditions such as heart failure and ischaemia, CGRP-containing nerves innervate throughout cardiac tissue and the vasculature, where evidence shows this peptide alleviates various aspects of their pathophysiology, including cardiac hypertrophy, reperfusion injury, cardiac inflammation, and apoptosis. Hence, CGRP has been suggested as a cardioprotective, endogenous mediator released under stress to help preserve cardiovascular function. With the recent developments of various CGRP-targeted pharmacotherapies, in the form of CGRP antibodies/antagonists as well as a CGRP analog, this review provides a summary and a discussion of the most recent basic science and clinical findings, initiating a discussion on the future of CGRP as a novel target in various cardiovascular diseases.Entities:
Keywords: CGRP; heart failure; humans; hypertension; neurogenic vasodilation; rodents
Year: 2018 PMID: 30283343 PMCID: PMC6156372 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2018.01249
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
The role and protective effects of CGRP in hypertension, ischemia, and heart failure.
| Disease | Role of CGRP | Mechanisms of protection | Evidence in animal models | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypertension | CGRP reduces blood pressure in pathologic states but is not involved in physiological regulation of blood pressure | Modulation of RAAS to maintain blood pressure | Plasma renin is higher in CGRP KO mice | |
| Treatment with ACE inhibitors on spontaneously hypertensive rats restores CGRP function and responses | ||||
| Inhibition of sympathetic activity reduces blood pressure | In a rat model, CGRP antagonist or capsaicin depletion potentiates vasoconstriction induced by periarterial nerve stimulation | |||
| CGRP KO mice had increased hypertension and aortic hypertrophy in an angiotensin II model | ||||
| αCGRP decreased arterial pressure while CGRP8-37 increased it in angiotensin II treated rats | ||||
| Heart failure | CGRP is released in a compensatory manner in response to heart failure and acts in a protective manner | Vasodilation decreases afterload to enhance stroke volume | In a congestive heart failure rat model, CGRP induces vasodilation of blood vessels | |
| CGRP infusion in dogs increased coronary flow and decreased coronary resistance and blood pressure | ||||
| Positive inotropic effects increase stroke volume and ejection fraction | CGRP infusion in dogs increased cardiac contractility and is blocked by ß receptor antagonists. As isolated myocytes show no response to CGRP, it is suggested CGRP mediates positive inotropy through sympathetic activation | |||
| Ischemia | CGRP is released, by the activation of TRPV1 channels, in ischemia where it exerts protective effects against reperfusion injury and mediates preconditioning | The mechanism of the protective effects of CGRP is unclear. CGRP is purported to play a role in ischemic preconditioning and is protective against reperfusion injury | In a rat model of remote hind limb preconditioning, TRPV and CGRP inhibitors abolished protective effects of preconditioning | |
| CGRP protects against ischemia-reperfusion injury in a rat liver | ||||
| CGRP decreases infarct size in a rat mesenteric artery occlusion model. PKC inhibition abolishes the effect of CGRP, and it is suggested myocardial PKCε activation by CGRP mediates protection |
Current monoclonal antibodies undergoing clinical trials and latest findings, in terms of cardiovascular adverse events and changes in cardiovascular perimeters.
| Name | Target | Trial | Study length | Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Erenumab (AMG-334) | CGRP receptor | STRIVE: Phase 3 DBPC | 6 months | No significant cardiovascular adverse events. Safety profile similar to placebo | |
| ARISE: Phase 3 DBPC | 3 months | No clinically significant cardiovascular events, with no change in electrocardiogram (ECG), hematology, or vital signs | |||
| DBPC study | 3 months | No significant cardiovascular events and no change in total exercise time in patients with existing cardiovascular disease | |||
| Eptinezumab (ALD403) | CGRP peptide | Phase 2 DBPC | 24 weeks | No significant adverse events related to treatment. No difference in vital signs and ECG | |
| Fremanezumab (TEV-48125) | CGRP peptide | Phase 2b DBPC | 12 weeks | No significant change in vital signs and ECG | |
| Phase 3 DBPC | 12 weeks | No significant change in vital signs and ECG. Most adverse events were due to injection and administration | |||
| Galcanezumab (LY2951742) | CGRP peptide | EVOLVE-1 Phase 3 DBPC | 10 months | No significant change in vital signs or increases in blood pressure. No cardiovascular adverse events reported |