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Calcium-independent negative inotropy by beta-myosin heavy chain gene transfer in cardiac myocytes.
- Source :
-
Circulation research [Circ Res] 2007 Apr 27; Vol. 100 (8), pp. 1182-90. Date of Electronic Publication: 2007 Mar 15. - Publication Year :
- 2007
-
Abstract
- Increased relative expression of the slow molecular motor of the heart (beta-myosin heavy chain [MyHC]) is well known to occur in many rodent models of cardiovascular disease and in human heart failure. The direct effect of increased relative beta-MyHC expression on intact cardiac myocyte contractility, however, is unclear. To determine the direct effects of increased relative beta-MyHC expression on cardiac contractility, we used acute genetic engineering with a recombinant adenoviral vector (AdMYH7) to genetically titrate beta-MyHC protein expression in isolated rodent ventricular cardiac myocytes that predominantly expressed alpha-MyHC (fast molecular motor). AdMYH7-directed beta-MyHC protein expression and sarcomeric incorporation was observed as soon as 1 day after gene transfer. Effects of beta-MyHC expression on myocyte contractility were determined in electrically paced single myocytes (0.2 Hz, 37 degrees C) by measuring sarcomere shortening and intracellular calcium cycling. Gene transfer-based replacement of alpha-MyHC with beta-MyHC attenuated contractility in a dose-dependent manner, whereas calcium transients were unaffected. For example, when beta-MyHC expression accounted for approximately 18% of the total sarcomeric myosin, the amplitude of sarcomere-length shortening (nanometers, nm) was depressed by 42% (151.0+/-10.7 [control] versus 87.0+/-5.4 nm [AdMYH7 transduced]); and genetic titration of beta-MyHC, leading to 38% beta-MyHC content, attenuated shortening by 57% (138.9+/-13.0 versus 59.7+/-7.1 nm). Maximal isometric cross-bridge cycling rate was also slower in AdMYH7-transduced myocytes. Results indicate that small increases of beta-MyHC expression (18%) have Ca2+ transient-independent physiologically relevant effects to decrease intact cardiac myocyte function. We conclude that beta-MyHC is a negative inotrope among the cardiac myofilament proteins.
- Subjects :
- Animals
Cells, Cultured
Gene Expression Regulation physiology
Myocardial Contraction physiology
Myocytes, Cardiac metabolism
Myosin Heavy Chains physiology
Rats
Ventricular Myosins physiology
Calcium physiology
Gene Transfer Techniques
Myocardial Contraction genetics
Myocytes, Cardiac physiology
Myosin Heavy Chains genetics
Myosin Heavy Chains metabolism
Ventricular Myosins genetics
Ventricular Myosins metabolism
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1524-4571
- Volume :
- 100
- Issue :
- 8
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Circulation research
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 17363698
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.RES.0000264102.00706.4e