Calmodulin kinase II inhibition protects against structural heart disease

β-Adrenergic receptor (βAR) stimulation increases cytosolic Ca 2+ to physiologically augment cardiac contraction, whereas excessive βAR activation causes adverse cardiac remodeling, including myocardial hypertrophy, dilation and dysfunction, in individuals with myocardial infarction. The Ca 2+ -calm...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature medicine 2005-04, Vol.11 (4), p.409-417
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Rong, Khoo, Michelle S C, Wu, Yuejin, Yang, Yingbo, Grueter, Chad E, Ni, Gemin, Price, Edward E, Thiel, William, Guatimosim, Silvia, Song, Long-Sheng, Madu, Ernest C, Shah, Anisha N, Vishnivetskaya, Tatiana A, Atkinson, James B, Gurevich, Vsevolod V, Salama, Guy, Lederer, W J, Colbran, Roger J, Anderson, Mark E
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:β-Adrenergic receptor (βAR) stimulation increases cytosolic Ca 2+ to physiologically augment cardiac contraction, whereas excessive βAR activation causes adverse cardiac remodeling, including myocardial hypertrophy, dilation and dysfunction, in individuals with myocardial infarction. The Ca 2+ -calmodulin–dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII) is a recently identified downstream element of the βAR-initiated signaling cascade that is linked to pathological myocardial remodeling and to regulation of key proteins involved in cardiac excitation-contraction coupling. We developed a genetic mouse model of cardiac CaMKII inhibition to test the role of CaMKII in βAR signaling in vivo . Here we show CaMKII inhibition substantially prevented maladaptive remodeling from excessive βAR stimulation and myocardial infarction, and induced balanced changes in excitation-contraction coupling that preserved baseline and βAR-stimulated physiological increases in cardiac function. These findings mark CaMKII as a determinant of clinically important heart disease phenotypes, and suggest CaMKII inhibition can be a highly selective approach for targeting adverse myocardial remodeling linked to βAR signaling.
ISSN:1078-8956
1546-170X
DOI:10.1038/nm1215