(Circulation. 2006;114:1258-1268.)
© 2006 American Heart Association, Inc.
Heart Failure |
From the Center for Translational Medicine, George Zallie and Family Laboratory for Cardiovascular Gene Therapy, Department of Medicine, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pa (P.M., E.G., H.F., S.T.P., B.D., A.D.E., A.M.F., W.J.K.); Department of Internal Medicine III, Laboratory for Cardiac Stem Cell and Gene Therapy, Division of Cardiology, University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany (P.M., H.S., M.V., A.R., S.T.P.); and St Vincents Institute of Medical Research, Department of Medicine, University of Melbourne, Fitzroy, Victoria, Australia (J.H.).
Correspondence to Patrick Most, MD, and Walter J. Koch, PhD, Center for Translational Medicine, Department of Medicine, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA 19107. E-mail patrick.most{at}jefferson.edu and walter.koch@jefferson.edu
Received February 21, 2006; revision received June 26, 2006; accepted July 13, 2006.
Background Diminished cardiac S100A1 protein levels are characteristic of ischemic and dilated human cardiomyopathy. Because S100A1 has recently been identified as a Ca2+-dependent inotropic factor in the heart, this study sought to explore the pathophysiological relevance of S100A1 levels in development and progression of postischemic heart failure (HF).
Methods and Results S100A1-transgenic (STG) and S100A1-knockout (SKO) mice were subjected to myocardial infarction (MI) by surgical left anterior descending coronary artery ligation, and survival, cardiac function, and remodeling were compared with nontransgenic littermate control (NLC) and wild-type (WT) animals up to 4 weeks. Although MI size was similar in all groups, infarcted S100A1-deficient hearts (SKO-MI) responded with acute contractile decompensation and accelerated transition to HF, rapid onset of cardiac remodeling with augmented apoptosis, and excessive mortality. NLC/WT-MI mice, displaying a progressive decrease in cardiac S100A1 expression, showed a later onset of cardiac remodeling and progression to HF. Infarcted S100A1-overexpressing hearts (STG-MI), however, showed preserved global contractile performance, abrogated apoptosis, and prevention from cardiac hypertrophy and HF with superior survival compared with NLC/WT-MI and SKO-MI. Both Gq-proteindependent signaling and protein kinase C activation resulted in decreased cardiac S100A1 mRNA and protein levels, whereas Gs-proteinrelated signaling exerted opposite effects on cardiac S100A1 abundance. Mechanistically, sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ cycling and ß-adrenergic signaling were severely impaired in SKO-MI myocardium but preserved in STG-MI.
Conclusions Our novel proof-of-concept study provides evidence that downregulation of S100A1 protein critically contributes to contractile dysfunction of the diseased heart, which is potentially responsible for driving the progressive downhill clinical course of patients with HF.
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