4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Marinobufagenin induces increases in procollagen expression in a process involving protein kinase C and Fli-1: implications for uremic cardiomyopathy

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-RENAL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 296, Issue 5, Pages F1219-F1226

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajprenal.90710.2008

Keywords

renal failure; cardiotonic steroids; fibrosis

Funding

  1. Intramural NIH HHS [Z01 AG000609-17] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NCI NIH HHS [P01-CA-78582] Funding Source: Medline
  3. NHLBI NIH HHS [R01-HL-67963] Funding Source: Medline

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Elkareh J, Periyasamy SM, Shidyak A, Vetteth S, Schroeder J, Raju V, Hariri IM, El-Okdi N, Gupta S, Fedorova L, Liu J, Fedorova OV, Kahaleh MB, Xie Z, Malhotra D, Watson DK, Bagrov AY, Shapiro JI. Marinobufagenin induces increases in procollagen expression in a process involving protein kinase C and Fli-1: implications for uremic cardiomyopathy. Am J Physiol Renal Physiol 296: F1219-F1226, 2009. First published March 4, 2009; doi:10.1152/ajprenal.90710.2008.-The cardiotonic steroid marinobufagenin (MBG) has been implicated in the pathogenesis of experimental uremic cardiomyopathy, which is characterized by progressive cardiac fibrosis. We examined whether the transcription factor Friend leukemia integration-1 (Fli-1) might be involved in this process. Fli-1-knockdown mice demonstrated greater cardiac collagen-1 expression and fibrosis compared with wild-type mice; both developed increased cardiac collagen expression and fibrosis after 5/6 nephrectomy. There was a strong inverse relationship between the expressions of Fli-1 and procollagen in primary culture of rat cardiac and human dermal fibroblasts as well as a cell line derived from renal fibroblasts and MBG-induced decreases in nuclear Fli-1 as well as increases in procollagen-1 expression in these cells. Transfection of a Fli-1 expression vector prevented increased procollagen-1 expression from MBG. MBG exposure induced a rapid translocation of the delta-isoform of protein kinase C (PKC delta) to the nucleus. This translocation was prevented by pharmacological inhibition of phospholipase C, and MBG-induced increases in procollagen-1 expression were prevented with a PKC delta-but not a PKC delta-specific inhibitor. Finally, immunoprecipitation studies strongly suggest that MBG induced phosphorylation of Fli-1. We feel these data support a causal relationship with MBG-induced translocation of PKC delta, which results in phosphorylation of as well as decreases in nuclear Fli-1 expression, which, in turn, leads to increases in collagen production. Should these findings be confirmed, we speculate that this pathway may represent a therapeutic target for uremic cardiomyopathy as well as other conditions associated with excessive fibrosis.

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