| Literature DB >> 31091723 |
Shanna Hamilton1,2, Dmitry Terentyev3,4.
Abstract
Aging of the heart is associated with a blunted response to sympathetic stimulation, reduced contractility, and increased propensity for arrhythmias, with the risk of sudden cardiac death significantly increased in the elderly population. The altered cardiac structural and functional phenotype, as well as age-associated prevalent comorbidities including hypertension and atherosclerosis, predispose the heart to atrial fibrillation, heart failure, and ventricular tachyarrhythmias. At the cellular level, perturbations in mitochondrial function, excitation-contraction coupling, and calcium homeostasis contribute to this electrical and contractile dysfunction. Major determinants of cardiac contractility are the intracellular release of Ca2+ from the sarcoplasmic reticulum by the ryanodine receptors (RyR2), and the following sequestration of Ca2+ by the sarco/endoplasmic Ca2+-ATPase (SERCa2a). Activity of RyR2 and SERCa2a in myocytes is not only dependent on expression levels and interacting accessory proteins, but on fine-tuned regulation via post-translational modifications. In this paper, we review how aberrant changes in intracellular Ca2+ cycling via these proteins contributes to arrhythmogenesis in the aged heart.Entities:
Keywords: ageing; calcium signaling; cardiac arrhythmia; ryanodine receptor; sarco/endoplasmic Ca2+-ATPase
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31091723 PMCID: PMC6566636 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20102386
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Changes in excitation-contraction coupling proteins during cardiac aging. Abbreviations: mo—months old, yrs—years old.
| Change in Function | Species | Sex | Ages Studied | Myocyte Type | Comments | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| ↑ | Mouse | Both | 6 vs. 24 mo (young adult vs. old) | Ventricular | Increased spontaneous Ca2+ spark activity | [ |
| Mouse | Unreported | 6 vs. 24 mo (young adult vs. old) | Ventricular | Increased single channel open probability, increased spontaneous Ca2+ spark activity | [ | |
| Mouse | Male | 3–4 vs. 24–26 mo (young vs. old) | Ventricular | Increased RyR2-mediated diastolic sparks and waves | [ | |
| Rabbit | Female | 5–9 mo vs. 4–6 yrs (young adult vs. old) | Ventricular | Increased oxidation and SR Ca2+ leak, unchanged PKA- but increased CaMKII-mediated phosphorylation | [ | |
| Mouse | Male | 4–6 vs. >20 mo (young adult vs. old) | Atrial | Increased glycation | [ | |
| Mouse | Male | 2–2.5 vs. 24–32 mo (young vs. old) | Atrial | Increased JNK2/CaMKII activity, enhanced SR Ca2+ leak | [ | |
| Mouse | Male | 4–5 vs. 24 mo (young adult vs. old) | Atrial | Increased CaMKII-mediated phosphorylation and oxidation | [ | |
| Human | Both | <75 vs. >75 yrs (adult vs. old) | Atrial | Increased glycation | [ | |
| Human | Both | <55, 55–74, >75 yrs (young, middle aged, old) | Atrial | Reduced CSQ2 expression and increased spontaneous RyR2 activity | [ | |
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| ↔ | Rabbit | Female | 5–9 mo vs. 4–6 yrs (young adult vs. old) | Ventricular | Unchanged protein levels | [ |
| Rat | Unreported | 3 vs. 6 mo (young vs. adult) | Ventricular | Unchanged protein levels | [ | |
| Rat | Male | 5, 15, 26 mo (young adult, adult, old) | Ventricular | Unchanged mRNA levels | [ | |
| Rabbit | Male | 6 vs. 26 mo (young vs. adult) | Atrial and ventricular | No change in protein expression | [ | |
| ↓ | Rat | Male | 6 vs. 26 mo (young vs. adult) | Ventricular | Reduced protein expression and pump activity | [ |
| Rat | Male | 6–8 vs. 26–28 mo (adult vs. old) | Ventricular | Reduced PKA-dependent PLB phosphorylation | [ | |
| Mouse | Male | 5, 24, and 34 mo (young adult, old, senescent) | Ventricular | Increased PLB expression | [ | |
| Rat | Male | 6–8 vs. 26–28 mo (adult vs. old) | Ventricular | Depressed activity associated with reduced CaMKII expression | [ | |
| Rat | Male | 5 vs. 26 mo (young adult vs. old) | Ventricular | Increased 3-Nitrotyrosine modification | [ | |
| Rat | Male | 2–26 mo (young-old) | Whole heart | Oxidative damage associated with reduced activity | [ | |
| Mouse | Unreported | 5 vs. 21 mo (adult vs. old) | Ventricular | Increased SERCa2a oxidation | [ | |
| Human | Both | <55, 55–74, >75 yrs (young, middle aged, old) | Atrial | Decreased expression levels associated with reduced SR Ca2+ content | [ | |
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| ↔ | Mouse | Female | 7 vs. 24 mo (adult vs. old) | Ventricular | No alterations in activation or peak ICa | [ |
| Rabbit | Female | 5–9 mo vs. 4–6 yrs (young adult vs. old) | Ventricular | No change in peak ICa, reduced responsiveness to β-adrenegic stimulation | [ | |
| ↓ | Mouse | Male | 3 vs. 24 mo (young vs. old) | Ventricular | Reduced ICa density at T-tubules | [ |
| Rat | Male | 2–3, 8–9, 25–26 mo (young, middle aged, old) | Ventricular | Delayed activation | [ | |
| Rat | Male | 6 vs. >27 mo (adult vs. old) | Ventricular | Delayed inactivation and reduced peak ICa density | [ | |
| Rat | Male | 3, 6–8, 24 mo (young, adult, old) | Ventricular | Delayed activation | [ | |
| Mouse | Male | 7 vs. 24 mo (adult vs. old) | Ventricular | Slower activation and reduced peak ICa | [ | |
| Rabbit | Male | 6 vs. 26 mo (young vs. adult) | Ventricular | Reduced ICa and maximal conductance, enhanced late component | [ | |
| Sheep | Female | 18 mo vs. >8 yrs (young vs. old) | Ventricular | Increased peak/integrated ICa | [ | |
| Dog | Unreported | 2–5, >8 yrs (adult vs. old) | Atrial | Reduced ICa, increased Ito | [ | |
| Dog | Both | 2–5, >8 yrs (adult vs. old) | Atria | Decreased mRNA and protein expression levels, reduced ICa | [ | |
| Dog | Unreported | 1–3, >8 yrs (adult vs old) | Atria | Decreased mRNA and protein expression levels, lower peak ICa density | [ | |
| Sheep | Female | 18 mo vs. >8yrs (young adult vs. old) | Atrial | Decreased peak ICa | [ | |
| Human | Both | <55, 55–74, >75 yrs (young, middle aged, old) | Atrial | Decreased peak ICa | [ | |
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| ↔ | Rats | Male | 6 vs. 26 mo (adult vs. old) | Ventricular | Unchanged expression levels | [ |
| Rabbits | Male | 6 vs. 26 mo (young vs. adult) | Atrial and ventricular | No change in protein expression | [ | |
| Rabbits | Female | 5–9 mo vs. 4–6 yrs (young adult vs. old) | Ventricular | No change in protein expression | [ | |
| Rat | Male | 14–15 vs. 27–31 mo (adult vs. old) | Atrial and ventricular | No change in protein expression | [ | |
| Mice | Unreported | 3 vs. 26–28 mo (young vs. old) | Ventricular | No change in protein levels | [ | |
| ↑ | Rat | Male | 14–15 vs. 27–31 mo (middle aged vs. old) | Atrial and ventricular | Increased forward activity | [ |
| Rat | Female | 3 vs. 24 mo (young vs. old) | Ventricular | Increased integrated current | [ | |
| ↓ | Rat | Male | 4 vs. 24 mo (young vs. old) | Ventricular | Reduced protein expression levels | [ |
Figure 1Schematic summarizing the effects of cardiac aging on intracellular Ca2+ release in senescent myocytes, via a mitochondrial ROS-RyR2 axis. Virtually universal findings in aged myocytes include (1) deficient signaling through β-adrenergic receptors (β-AR) and (2) mitochondrial dysfunction, including diminished activity of the electron transport chain (ETC) and ATP production, as well an increased ROS emission. (3) It also includes enhanced activity of RyR2, due to oxidation by ROS. CaMKII phosphorylation may also increase RyR2 activity. Increased spontaneous intracellular Ca2+ release via oxidized RyR2s underlies arrhythmogenesis. Question marks indicate disparate findings regarding the effects of aging on LTCC, NCX, and SERCa2a/PLB function, whereby activity has been reported as unchanged, increased, or decreased. There is some evidence that mitochondrial Ca2+ levels may be diminished in cardiac aging even though this remains to be fully explored.