Back to Search Start Over

Adiponectin expression in patients with inflammatory cardiomyopathy indicates favourable outcome and inflammation control

Authors :
Heinz-Peter Schultheiss
Carmen Scheibenbogen
Stefanie Krohn
Jenny Stehr
Peter Bobbert
Sabrina Wilk
Gabriele Kania
Alexander Jenke
Wolfgang Poller
Carsten Skurk
Uwe Kuehl
Ursula Rauch
Urs Eriksson
University of Zurich
Skurk, Carsten
Source :
European heart journal
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2011.

Abstract

Aims Circulating adiponectin (APN) is an immunomodulatory, pro-angiogenic, and anti-apoptotic adipocytokine protecting against acute viral heart disease and preventing pathological remodelling after cardiac injury. The purpose of this study was to describe the regulation and effects of APN in patients with inflammatory cardiomyopathy (DCMi). Methods and results Adiponectin expression and outcome were assessed in 173 patients with DCMi, 30 patients with non-inflammatory DCM, and 30 controls. Mechanistic background of these findings was addressed in murine experimental autoimmune myocarditis (EAM), a model of human DCMi, and further elucidated in vitro . Adiponectin plasma concentrations were significantly higher in DCMi compared with DCM or controls, i.e. 6.8 ± 3.9 µg/mL vs. 5.4 ± 3.6 vs. 4.76 ± 2.5 µg/mL ( P < 0.05, respectively) and correlated significantly with cardiac mononuclear infiltrates (CD3+: r 2= 0.025, P = 0.038; CD45R0+: r 2= 0.058, P = 0.018). At follow-up, DCMi patients with high APN levels showed significantly increased left ventricular ejection fraction improvement, decreased left ventricular end-diastolic diameter, and reduced cardiac inflammatory infiltrates compared with patients with low APN levels. A multivariate linear regression analysis implicated APN as an independent prognostic factor for inhibition of cardiac inflammation. In accordance with these findings in human DCMi, EAM mice exhibited elevated plasma APN. Adiponectin gene transfer led to significant downregulation of key inflammatory mediators promoting disease. Mechanistically, APN acted as a negative regulator of T cells by reducing antigen specific expansion ( P < 0.01) and suppressed TNFα-mediated NFκB activation ( P < 0.01) as well as release of reactive oxygen species in cardiomyocytes. Conclusion Our results implicate that APN acts as endogenously upregulated anti-inflammatory cytokine confining cardiac inflammation and progression in DCMi.

Details

ISSN :
15229645 and 0195668X
Volume :
32
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Heart Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....611a313bf3ea223164c0ece5cae0e3ac