4.7 Article

Myocardial Infarction Alters Adaptation of the Tethered Mitral Valve

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY
Volume 67, Issue 3, Pages 275-287

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jacc.2015.10.092

Keywords

echocardiography; endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition; inflammation; mitral regurgitation; papillary muscle

Funding

  1. Fondation Leducq (Paris, France) [07CVD04]
  2. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health [R01HL109506]
  3. National Institutes of Health [K24 HL67434]
  4. American Society of Echocardiography Career Development Award
  5. Erwin-Schrodinger Stipend (FWF Austrian Science Fund)
  6. Harvard University, affiliated academic health care centers
  7. Harvard Catalyst, The Harvard Clinical and Translational Science Center (National Center for Research Resources)
  8. Harvard Catalyst, The Harvard Clinical and Translational Science Center (National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, National Institutes of Health award) [UL1 TR001102]

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BACKGROUND In patients with myocardial infarction (MI), leaflet tethering by displaced papillary muscles induces mitral regurgitation (MR), which doubles mortality. Mitral valves (MVs) are larger in such patients but fibrosis sets in counterproductively. The investigators previously reported that experimental tethering alone increases mitral valve area in association with endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition. OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to explore the clinically relevant situation of tethering and MI, testing the hypothesis that ischemic milieu modifies mitral valve adaptation. METHODS Twenty-three adult sheep were examined. Under cardiopulmonary bypass, the papillary muscle tips in 6 sheep were retracted apically to replicate tethering, short of producing MR (tethered alone). Papillary muscle retraction was combined with apical MI created by coronary ligation in another 6 sheep (tethered plus MI), and left ventricular remodeling was limited by external constraint in 5 additional sheep (left ventricular constraint). Six sham-operated sheep were control subjects. Diastolic mitral valve surface area was quantified by 3-dimensional echocardiography at baseline and after 58 + 5 days, followed by histopathology and flow cytometry of excised leaflets. RESULTS Tethered plus MI leaflets were markedly thicker than tethered-alone valves and sham control subjects. Leaflet area also increased significantly. Endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition, detected as alpha-smooth muscle actin-positive endothelial cells, significantly exceeded that in tethered-alone and control valves. Transforming growth factor-beta, matrix metalloproteinase expression, and cellular proliferation were markedly increased. Uniquely, tethering plus MI showed endothelial activation with vascular adhesion molecule expression, neovascularization, and cells positive for CD45, considered a hematopoietic cell marker. Tethered plus MI findings were comparable with external ventricular constraint. CONCLUSIONS MI altered leaflet adaptation, including a profibrotic increase in valvular cell activation, CD45-positive cells, and matrix turnover. Understanding cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying leaflet adaptation and fibrosis could yield new therapeutic opportunities for reducing ischemic MR. (C) 2016 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation.

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