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Human microvascular dysfunction and apoptotic injury induced by AL amyloidosis light chain proteins.

Authors :
Migrino, Raymond Q.
Truran, Seth
Gutterman, David D.
Franco, Daniel A.
Bright, Megan
Schlundt, Brittany
Timmons, Mitchell
Motta, Angelica
Phillips, Shane A.
Hari, Parameswaran
Source :
American Journal of Physiology: Heart & Circulatory Physiology; Dec2011, Vol. 301 Issue 6, pH2305-H2312, 8p
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Light chain amyloidosis (AL) involves overproduction of amyloidogenic light chain proteins (LC) leading to heart failure, yet the mechanisms underlying tissue toxicity remain unknown. We hypothesized that LC induces endothelial dysfunction in non-AL human microvasculature and apoptotic injury in human coronary artery endothelial cells (HCAECs). Adipose arterioles (n = 34, 50 ± 3 yr) and atrial coronary arterioles (n = 19, 68 ± 2 yr) from non-AL subjects were cannulated. Adipose arteriole dilator responses to acetylcholine/papaverine were measured at baseline and 1 h exposure to LC (20 μg/ml) from biopsy-proven AL subjects (57 ± 11 yr) without and with antioxidant cotreatment. Coronary arteriole dilation to bradykinin/papaverine was measured post-LC exposure. HCAECs were exposed to 1 or 24 h of LC. LC reduced dilation to acetylcholine (10−4 M: 41.6 ± 7 vs. 85.8 ± 2.2% control, P < 0.001) and papaverine (81.4 ± 4.6 vs. 94.8 ± 1.3% control, P < 0.01) in adipose arterioles and to bradykinin (10<superscript>-6</superscript> M: 68.6 ± 6.2 vs. 90.9 ± 1.6% control, P < 0.001) but not papaverine in coronary arterioles. There was an increase in superoxide and peroxynitrite in arterioles treated with LC. Adipose arteriole dilation was restored by cotreatment with polyethylene glycol-superoxide dismutase and tetrahydrobiopterin but only partially restored by mitoquinone (mitochondria-targeted antioxidant) and gp91ds-tat (NADPH oxidase inhibitor). HCAECs exposed to LC showed reduced NO and increased superoxide, peroxynitrite, annexin-V, and propidium iodide compared with control. Brief exposure to physiological amounts of LC induced endothelial dysfunction in human adipose and coronary arterioles and increased apoptotic injury in coronary artery endothelial cells likely as a result of oxidative stress, reduced NO bioavailability, and peroxynitrite production. Microvascular dysfunction and injury is a novel mechanism underlying AL pathobiology and is a potential target for therapy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03636135
Volume :
301
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
American Journal of Physiology: Heart & Circulatory Physiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
69619160
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00503.2011