Role of NOD1 in Heart Failure Progression via Regulation of Ca2+ Handling.
Author: Val-Blasco, A.; Garcia Miguel Piedras, María José; Ruiz-Hurtado, G.; Suárez, N.; Prieto, P.; González Ramos, S.; Gómez Hurtado, N.; Delgado, C.; Pereira, L.; Benito, G.; Zaragoza Sánchez, Carlos
; Domenech, N.; Crespo Leiro, M.; Vasquez Echeverri, D.; Núñez, G.; López Collazo, E.; Boscá, L.; Fernández Velasco, M.
Abstract: BACKGROUND:
Heart failure (HF) is a complex syndrome associated with a maladaptive innate immune system response that leads to deleterious cardiac remodeling. However, the underlying mechanisms of this syndrome are poorly understood. Nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain-containing protein 1 (NOD1) is a newly recognized innate immune sensor involved in cardiovascular diseases.
OBJECTIVES:
This study evaluated the role of NOD1 in HF progression.
METHODS:
NOD1 was examined in human failing myocardium and in a post-myocardial infarction (PMI) HF model evaluated in wild-type (wt-PMI) and Nod1-/- mice (Nod1-/--PMI).
RESULTS:
The NOD1 pathway was up-regulated in human and murine failing myocardia. Compared with wt-PMI, hearts from Nod1-/--PMI mice had better cardiac function and attenuated structural remodeling. Ameliorated cardiac function in Nod1-/--PMI mice was associated with prevention of Ca2+ dynamic impairment linked to HF, including smaller and longer intracellular Ca2+ concentration transients and a lesser sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ load due to a down-regulation of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-adenosine triphosphatase pump and by augmented levels of the Na+/Ca2+ exchanger. Increased diastolic Ca2+ release in wt-PMI cardiomyocytes was related to hyperphosphorylation of ryanodine receptors, which was blunted in Nod1-/--PMI cardiomyocytes. Pharmacological blockade of NOD1 also prevented Ca2+ mishandling in wt-PMI mice. Nod1-/--PMI mice showed significantly fewer ventricular arrhythmias and lower mortality after isoproterenol administration. These effects were associated with lower aberrant systolic Ca2+ release and with a prevention of the hyperphosphorylation of ryanodine receptors under isoproterenol administration in Nod1-/--PMI mice.
CONCLUSIONS:
NOD1 modulated intracellular Ca2+ mishandling in HF, emerging as a new target for HF therapy.
Files in this item
Files | Size | Format | View |
---|---|---|---|
There are no files associated with this item. |
Collections
- MEDICINA [592]