Increased inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expression is a component of the immune response and has been demonstrated in cardiomyocytes in septic shock, myocarditis, transplant rejection, ischemia, and dilated cardiomyopathy. To explore whether the consequences of such expression are adaptive or pathogenic, we have generated a transgenic mouse model conditionally targeting the expression of a human iNOS cDNA to myocardium. Chronic cardiac-specific upregulation of iNOS in transgenic mice led to increased production of peroxynitrite. This was associated with a mild inflammatory cell infiltrate, cardiac fibrosis, hypertrophy, and dilatation. While iNOS-overexpressing mice infrequently developed overt heart failure, they displayed a high incidence of sudden cardiac death due to bradyarrhythmia. This dramatic cardiac phenotype was rescued by specific attenuation of transgene activity. These data implicate cardiomyocyte iNOS overexpression as sufficient to cause cardiomyopathy, bradyarrhythmia, and sudden cardiac death.
Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) acts via its G protein-coupled receptor (GLP-1R) to regulate blood glucose. Although the GLP-1R is widely expressed in peripheral tissues, including the heart, and exogenous GLP-1 administration increases heart rate and blood pressure in rodents, the physiological importance of GLP-1R action in the cardiovascular system remains unclear. We now show that 2-month-old mice with genetic deletion of the GLP-1R (GLP-1R(-/-)) exhibit reduced resting heart rate and elevated left ventricular (LV) end diastolic pressure compared with CD-1 wild-type controls. At the age of 5 months, echocardiography and histology demonstrate increased LV thickness in GLP-1R(-/-) mice. Although baseline hemodynamic parameters of GLP-1R(-/-) did not differ significantly from those of wild type, GLP-1R(-/-) mice displayed impaired LV contractility and diastolic function after insulin administration. The defective cardiovascular response to insulin was not attributable to a generalized defect in the stress response, because GLP-1R(-/-) mice responded appropriately to insulin with increased c-fos expression in the hypothalamus and increased circulating levels of glucagon and epinephrine. Furthermore, LV contractility after exogenous epinephrine infusion was also reduced in GLP-1R(-/-) mice. These findings provide new evidence implicating an essential role for GLP-1R in the control of murine cardiac structure and function in vivo.
Background-Increased serine elastase activity has been implicated in the vascular remodeling associated with chronic hypoxia-related pulmonary hypertension in rats. Methods and Results-In this study we determined the time course of hypoxia-induced serine elastase activity in the murine lung and related this to initiation of a proteolytic cascade characterized by an increase in matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs). We then used transgenic mice in which overexpression of the selective serine elastase inhibitor elafin was targeted to the cardiovascular system to determine whether upregulation of a naturally occurring serine elastase inhibitor suppresses MMPs and the hemodynamic and structural response to chronic hypoxia (air at 380 mm Hg). In nontransgenic but not in elafin-transgenic mice, we documented a transient increase in serine elastase activity after 12 hours of hypoxic exposure attributed to a 30-kDa protein as determined by elastin zymography and fluorophosphonate/ fluorophosphate-biotin labeling. Two days after hypoxia, the pro-forms of MMP-2 and MMP-9 were induced in the nontransgenic mice, but MMP-9 was suppressed in elafin-transgenic mice. Acute hypoxic vasoconstriction was similar in nontransgenic and elafin-transgenic littermates. Chronic hypoxia for 26 days resulted in Ͼ1-fold increase in right ventricular pressure (PϽ0.004) in nontransgenic compared with control or elafin-transgenic littermates. In the latter mice, normalization of the right ventricular pressure was associated with reduced muscularization and preservation of the number of distal vessels (PϽ0.04 for both comparisons). Conclusions-Modulation
The myogenic response (MR) may represent an important physiological parameter underlying arterial blood pressure (BP). We studied the effects of age, gender, and BP on the MR of mesenteric arteries from 8- to 52-wk-old mice. Increasing age and BP are associated with an increase in the perfusion pressure at which tone develops (myogenic set point). An inverse correlation exists between age and extent (magnitude) of the MR in male (r(2) = 0.93, P = 0.0087) and female mice (r(2) = 0.90, P = 0.013) as well as between BP and extent of the MR in male (r(2) = 0.96, P = 0.0036) and female (r(2) = 0.90, P = 0.014) mice. In contrast, the strength of the MR (slope of active diameter-pressure relationship) and phenylephrine-mediated constriction did not differ among these groups. Although gender had no effect on MR at any perfusion pressure or age, only male mice showed significant salt-induced hypertension and an associated increase in the set point and reduction in the extent of the MR. The set point and extent of the MR is linked to the in vivo pressure during development and experimental hypertension.
Abstract-In vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs), several mechanisms act in concert to regulate the intracellular calcium concentration [Ca 2ϩ ] i , which may in turn affect vascular tone. One such mechanism is the extrusion of Ca 2ϩ by the plasma membrane calcium ATPase (PMCA). To address, in particular, the role of the neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS)-associating isoform PMCA4b in regulating vascular tone, a doxycycline-responsive transgene for human PMCA4b was overexpressed in arterial SMCs of mice. Overexpression of hPMCA4b resulted in a 2-fold increase in total aortic PMCA4 protein expression and significant real-time RT-PCR-documented differences in the levels of endogenous mouse PMCA1, PMCA4, SERCA2, and IP3R1 gene expression in arterial SMCs. Whereas no significant difference in basal [Ca 2ϩ ] i or Ca 2ϩ sensitivity was observed in vascular SMCs or mesenteric arteries, respectively, from hPMCA4b-overexpressing versus control mice, hPMCA4b-overexpressing mice revealed a reduced set-point and increased extent of myogenic response and heightened sensitivity to vasoconstrictors. Treatment of arteries with an nNOS inhibitor resulted in a reduced set-point and increased extent of the myogenic response in control but not hPMCA4b-overexpressing mice. Moreover, aortic SMCs from hPMCA4b-overexpressing mice exhibited reduced levels of cGMP under both basal and phenylephrine-stimulated conditions. These changes were associated with significant doxycycline-reversible elevations in blood pressure. Taken together, these data show that overexpression of hPMCA4b in arterial SMCs increases vascular reactivity and blood pressure, an effect that may be mediated in part by negative regulation of nNOS. Key Words: transgenic mice Ⅲ blood pressure Ⅲ nitric oxide synthase Ⅲ intracellular calcium Ⅲ myogenic tone H ypertension is a polygenic disease responsive to environmental factors. Although more than 50 genes have been implicated in the regulation of blood pressure, 1 the complexity of hypertension has been additionally revealed by studies suggesting that insertion or deletion of single genes can lead to either reduced or elevated blood pressure. 2 One hallmark of hypertension is increased peripheral resistance attributable to both structural and functional changes in resistance arteries. 3 On a functional level, peripheral resistance is a balance between vasodilator and vasoconstrictor mechanisms of vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs), in turn dependent on the intracellular calcium concentration ([Ca 2ϩ ] i ) and the Ca 2ϩ sensitivity of the contractile apparatus. Homeostasis of Ca 2ϩ involves several distinct mechanisms, including the extrusion of Ca 2ϩ by plasma membrane calcium ATPase (PMCA). These high-affinity calmodulin-responsive Ca 2ϩ efflux pumps are P-type transport proteins encoded for by a family of 4 genes (PMCA1 through PMCA4). Both PMCA1 and PMCA4 are ubiquitously expressed, whereas PMCA2 and PMCA3 show cell-specific patterns of expression. 4 From these 4 genes, more than 20 distinct isoforms of PMCA ...
Increased inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) expression is a component of the immune response and has been demonstrated in cardiomyocytes in septic shock, myocarditis, transplant rejection, ischemia, and dilated cardiomyopathy. To explore whether the consequences of such expression are adaptive or pathogenic, we have generated a transgenic mouse model conditionally targeting the expression of a human iNOS cDNA to myocardium. Chronic cardiac-specific upregulation of iNOS in transgenic mice led to increased production of peroxynitrite. This was associated with a mild inflammatory cell infiltrate, cardiac fibrosis, hypertrophy, and dilatation. While iNOS-overexpressing mice infrequently developed overt heart failure, they displayed a high incidence of sudden cardiac death due to bradyarrhythmia. This dramatic cardiac phenotype was rescued by specific attenuation of transgene activity. These data implicate cardiomyocyte iNOS overexpression as sufficient to cause cardiomyopathy, bradyarrhythmia, and sudden cardiac death.
We cloned a rat vascular chymase (RVCH) from smooth muscle cells (SMCs) that converts angiotensin I to II and is up-regulated in SMC from spontaneously hypertensive vs. normotensive rats. To determine whether increased activity of RVCH is sufficient to cause hypertension, transgenic mice were generated with targeted conditional expression of RVCH to SMC, with the use of the tetracyclinecontrolled transactivator (tTA). We confirmed conditional expression of RVCH by mRNA, protein, and chymase activity in the absence, but not in the presence, of dietary doxycycline. The systolic blood pressure (mmHg), measured by carotid artery cannulation at 10 -12 weeks of age, was higher in tTA؉͞RVCH؉ mice than in nonbinary transgenic littermates (136 ؎ 4 vs. 109 ؎ 3) (P < 0.05), as were the diastolic and mean pressures. Hypertension was completely reversed by doxycycline, suggesting a causal link with chymase expression. Medial thickening of mesenteric arteries from tTA؉͞RVCH؉ mice vs. littermates (0.82 ؎ 0.1 vs. 0.42 ؎ 0.02) (P < 0.05) was associated with increased SMC proliferation, as judged by positive immunoreactivity, with the use of an antibody to the proliferating cell nuclear antigen. These structural changes were prevented by doxycycline. Perfusion myography of mesenteric arteries from tTA؉͞RVCH؉ mice also revealed increased vasoconstriction in response to phenylephrine and impaired metacholine-induced vasodilatation when compared with littermate controls or with the doxycyline-treated group. Our studies suggest that up-regulation of this vascular chymase is sufficient to cause a hypertensive arteriopathy, and that RVCH may be a candidate gene and a therapeutic target in patients with high blood pressure.smooth muscle cells C hymases are serine proteinases that were thought to be produced exclusively by mast cells in blood vessels and the myocardium. These enzymes generate angiotensin (Ang) II in large and resistance vessels (1-3) and in the heart (4) and also can convert big-endothelin-1 to endothelin-1 in vitro (5) and inactivate the vasodilator bradykinin (6). That chymase-dependent Ang II formation can occur in the intact animal is evident from studies in the baboon, where it was shown that Ang-converting enzyme inhibitors could not prevent the hemodynamic response to [Pro11, Da1a12]Ang I, which produces Ang II upon incubation with chymase (7). In addition to blood pressure regulation, both Ang II and endothelin-1 are involved in the stimulation of vascular smooth muscle cell (SMC) growth and proliferation, vascular remodeling, and cardiac hypertrophy (8, 9). Chymases also can influence structural remodeling through their ability to degrade extracellular matrix proteins, including fibronectin and collagen type IV, possibly through activation of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) (MMP-1, MMP-3, and MMP-9) (10-12). Chymases also stimulate collagen fibirillogenesis by cleavage of type I procollagen (13).Several studies have provided compelling data to suggest that chymases could play a central role in cardiovascular di...
The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR), a ligand activated transcription factor, is the receptor for the polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons found in tobacco smoke, polychlorinated biphenyls, and the environmental pollutant, dioxin. To better understand the role of the AhR in the heart, echocardiography, invasive measurements of aortic and left ventricular pressures, isolated working heart preparations, as well as morphological and molecular analysis were used to investigate the impact of AhR inactivation on the mouse heart using the AhR knockout as a model. Cardiac hypertrophy is an early phenotypic manifestation of the AhR knockout. Although the knockout animals were not hypertensive at the ages examined, cardiomyopathy accompanied by diminished cardiac output developed. Despite the structural left ventricular remodeling, the hearts of these animals exhibit minimal fibrosis and do not have the expected increases in surrogate molecular markers of cardiac hypertrophy. The anatomic remodeling without typical features of molecular remodeling is not consistent with hypertrophic growth secondary to pressure or volume overload, suggesting that increased cardiomyocyte size may be a direct consequence of the absence of the AhR in this cell type.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.