Rationale Previously, we demonstrated that a deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA)-salt hypertensive mouse model produces cardiac oxidative stress and diastolic dysfunction with preserved systolic function. Oxidative stress has been shown to increase late inward sodium current (INa), reducing the net cytosolic Ca2+ efflux. Objective Oxidative stress in the DOCA-salt model may increase late INa resulting in diastolic dysfunction amenable to treatment with ranolazine. Methods and Results Echocardiography detected evidence of diastolic dysfunction in hypertensive mice that improved after treatment with ranolazine (E/E′, sham 31.9 ± 2.8, sham+ranolazine 30.2 ± 1.9, DOCA-salt 41.8 ± 2.6, and DOCA-salt+ranolazine 31.9 ± 2.6, p = 0.018). The end diastolic pressure volume relationship slope was elevated in DOCA-salt mice, improving to sham levels with treatment (sham 0.16 ± 0.01 vs. sham+ranolazine 0.18 ± 0.01 vs. DOCA-salt 0.23 ± 0.2 vs. DOCA-salt+ranolazine 0.17 ± 0.01 mm Hg/L, p < 0.005). DOCA-salt myocytes demonstrated impaired relaxation, τ, improving with ranolazine (DOCA-salt 0.18 ± 0.02, DOCA-salt + ranolazine 0.13 ± 0.01, Sham 0.11 ± 0.01, Sham + ranolazine 0.09 ± 0.02 s, p = 0.0004). Neither late INa nor the Ca2+ transients were different from sham myocytes. Detergent extracted fiber bundles from DOCA-salt hearts demonstrated increased myofilament response to Ca2+ with glutathionylation of myosin binding protein C. Treatment with ranolazine ameliorated the Ca2+ response and cross-bridge kinetics. Conclusions Therefore, diastolic dysfunction could be reversed by ranolazine, likely resulting from a direct effect on myofilaments, indicating that cardiac oxidative stress may mediate diastolic dysfunction through altering the contractile apparatus.
The gas-phase heat of formation (DeltaH(f,298)) of the 1,3,5-tridehydrobenzene triradical has been determined by using a negative ion thermochemical cycle. The first three measurements carried out were of the gas-phase acidity of 3,5-dichlorobenzoic acid, the enthalpy for decarboxylation of 3,5-dichlorobenzoate, and the enthalpy for chloride loss from 3,5,-dichlorophenide and constitute the measurement of the heat of formation for 5-chloro-m-benzyne. The last two measurements, the electron affinity of 5-chloro-m-benzyne, and the threshold for chloride loss from 5-chloro-m-benzyne, when combined with DeltaH(f,298) of 5-chloro-m-benzyne, give the heat of formation of the triradical. The 5-chloro-m-benzyne heat of formation is 116.2 +/- 3.7 kcal/mol. The heat of formation of the 1,3,5-tridehydrobenzene triradical measured in this work is 179.1 +/- 4.6 kcal/mol. This heat of formation was used to derive the bond dissociation energy (BDE) at the 5-position of m-benzyne, a third BDE in benzene. The BDE, at 109.2 +/- 5.6 kcal/mol, is ca. 4 kcal/mol lower than the first BDE in benzene (112.9 kcal/mol) and significantly higher than the BDE of phenyl radical at the meta position. The agreement between the first and third BDEs implies that the triradical is best described as a phenyl radical that interacts little with a m-benzyne moiety. The experimentally measured BDE is in good agreement with multireference configuration interaction calculations, which predict a (2)A(1) ground state for the Jahn-Teller distorted triradical. The trends in the first, second, and third BDEs of benzene are similar to those found for cyclopropane, suggesting a cyclopropenyl-like electronic structure within the six-membered ring of the 1,3,5-benzene triradical.
The C - H bond dissociation energies for naphthalene were determined using a negative ion thermochemical cycle involving the gas-phase acidity (Delta H (acid)) and electron affinity (EA) for both the alpha- and beta-positions. The gas-phase acidity of the naphthalene alpha- and beta-positions and the EAs of the alpha- and beta-naphthyl radicals were measured in the gas phase in a flowing after glow-triple quadrupole apparatus. A variation of the Cooks kinetic method was used to measure the EAs of the naphthyl radicals by collision-induced dissociation of the corresponding alpha- and beta-naphthylsulfinate adducts formed by reactions in the flow tube portion of the instrument. Calibration references included both pi and sigma radicals, and full entropy analysis was performed over a series of calibration curves measured at collision energies ranging from 3.5 to 8 eV (center-of-mass). The measured EAs are 33.0 +/- 1.4 and 31.4 +/- 1.0 kcal mol(-1) (1 kcal = 4.184 kJ) for the alpha- and beta-naphthyl radicals, respectively. The gas-phase acidities for naphthalene were measured by the DePuy silane cleavage method, which utilizes the relative abundances of aryldimethylsiloxides and trimethylsiloxide that result from competitive cleavages from a proposed penta coordinate hydroxysiliconate intermediate. The measured acidities are 394.0 +/- 5.0 and 397.6 +/- 4.8 kcal mol(-1) for the alpha- and beta- positions, respectively. The C - H bond dissociation energies calculated from the thermochemical cycle are 113.4 +/- 5.2 and 115.4 +/- 4.9 kcal mol(-1) for the alpha- and beta-positions, respectively. These energies are, to within experimental error, indistinguishable and are approximately the same as the first bond dissociation energy for benzene.
The perturbation on the intrinsic reactivity of a radical moiety by the presence of a nearby charged moiety was probed by comparing the reactivity of analogous positively and negatively charged distonic ions. The possible contributions of various factors (collisional encounter probability, ion−molecule solvation effects, reaction exothermicity, polar effects) to the overall perturbation are discussed. The N-(3-dehydrophenyl)pyridinium and 3-dehydrobenzoate ions were chosen as distonic ion models of the phenyl radical for this study. The significant differences in their reaction rates are examined and the origins of these rate differences are explored. Observations that nucleophilic radicals react more rapidly with electron-deficient reagents and electrophilic radicals react more rapidly with electron-rich reagents can be made slightly more quantitative by comparing certain thermochemical values of each distonic ion (radical moiety IE and EA) with those of each neutral reagent. The smaller the relevant IE−EA energy difference, the lower the transition state energy and the faster the reaction. The overwhelming control of the transition state energy by the charge site of the distonic phenyl radical analogues described here emerges as an important caveat to their use as models for phenyl radical reactivity.
Renin-angiotensin system (RAS) activation is associated with arrhythmias. We investigated the effects of RAS inhibition in cardiac-specific angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) overexpression (ACE 8/8) mice, which exhibit proclivity to ventricular tachycardia (VT) and sudden death because of reduced connexin43 (Cx43). ACE 8/8 mice were treated with an ACE inhibitor (captopril) or an angiotensin receptor type-1 blocker (losartan). Subsequently, electrophysiological studies were performed, and the hearts were extracted for Cx43 quantification using immunoblotting, immunohistochemistry, fluorescent dye spread method, and sodium current quantification using whole cell patch clamping. VT was induced in 12.5% of captopril-treated ACE 8/8 and in 28.6% of losartan-treated mice compared to 87.5% of untreated mice (P<0.01). Losartan and captopril treatment increased total Cx43 2.4-fold (P=0.01) and the Cx43 phosphorylation ratio 2.3-fold (P=0.005). Treatment was associated with a recovery of gap junctional conductance. Survival in treated mice improved to 0.78 at 10 weeks (95% confidence interval 0.64 to 0.92), compared to the expected survival of less than 0.50. In a model of RAS activation, arrhythmic risk was correlated with reduced Cx43 amount and phosphorylation. RAS inhibition resulted in increased total and phosphorylated Cx43, decreased VT inducibility, and improved survival.
Objectives: When either ventricular myocardium becomes ischemic or autonomic nervous system activity changes with age, the relationship between ventricular repolarization duration and RR interval will change as well. We studied the relationship between ventricular repolarization duration and RR interval among normal subjects in different age groups and between patients with myocardial infarction (MI) and age-matched healthy subjects. Methods: Ventricular repolarization duration variability (RDV) spectra were separated into RR-dependent and RR-independent components. We compared spectral measures among normal subjects in different age groups and between patients with MI and age-matched healthy subjects. Results: The RR-dependent component of RDV spectra, which is correlated with autonomic nervous system activity, significantly decreased with age for healthy subjects. The RR-independent component significantly increased in MI patients compared to age-matched healthy subjects. Conclusions: We demonstrated the increase in RDV upon decreasing age and in the presence of MI. Our results support the idea that the RR-dependent part corresponds to the physiology-related part of the RDV spectra and the RR-independent part corresponds to the pathology-related part of the RDV spectra. Our study suggests that these spectral measures are likely to be helpful in the evaluation of a patient with MI and merit further investigation.
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