Propranolol prevents enhanced stress signaling in Gs alpha cardiomyopathy: potential mechanism for beta-blockade in heart failure |
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Authors: | Karoor Vijaya Vatner Stephen F Takagi Gen Yang Guiping Thaisz Jill Sadoshima Junichi Vatner Dorothy E |
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Affiliation: | Department of Cell Biology and Molecular Medicine, Cardiovascular Research Institute, The University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, New Jersey Medical School, P.O. Box 1709, 185 South Orange Avenue, MSB G-609, Newark, NJ 07101-1709, USA. |
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Abstract: | Beta-adrenergic receptor (beta-AR) blockade is now widely utilized therapeutically for heart failure, but its cellular mechanism of action is not clear. Mice with cardiac-specific overexpressed Gs alpha develop cardiomyopathy with age, which can be prevented by beta-AR blockade, making this model potentially useful for addressing this question. Our hypothesis was that distal mechanisms in beta-AR signaling, i.e. mitogen-activated protein kinases, were a potential mechanism. At 6-9 months, when cardiomyopathy began to develop in Gs alpha mice, there were significant increases in phospho-kinase levels of p38 MAP kinase (p38 MAPK), and p70(S6K) compared to wild type. In contrast, phospho-kinase levels of ERK and Akt were increased at 9-10 months, but phospho-kinase levels of c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) increased only at 15-20 months (when cardiomyopathy was fully manifest). Treatment of 9-10 months old Gs alpha mice with propranolol for 5 weeks reverted the phospho-kinase levels of these kinases known to be involved in the growth and death of cardiac myocytes. Another novel observation of this study was that there were also decreases in total protein levels of p38 MAPK, p70(S6K), JNK, and Akt following beta-AR blockade. Thus, chronically enhanced beta-AR signaling elicits a differential pattern of altered mitogen-activated protein kinases, which was reversed with beta-AR blockade, raising the possibility that the beneficial effects of beta-AR blockade therapy in heart failure may be due in part to the inhibition of these pathways. |
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Keywords: | Stress kinases Cardiomyopathy Propranolol Heart failure MAPK signaling |
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