4.8 Article

Intermittent pressure overload triggers hypertrophy-independent cardiac dysfunction and vascular rarefaction

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION
Volume 116, Issue 6, Pages 1547-1560

Publisher

AMER SOC CLINICAL INVESTIGATION INC
DOI: 10.1172/JCI25397

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Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [HL 49277, HL 71266, R01 HL071266, R01 HL049277-15, P01 HL 75443, R01 HL049277, P01 HL075443, R01 HL049277-14] Funding Source: Medline

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For over a century, there has been intense debate as to the reason why some cardiac stresses are pathological and others are physiological. One long-standing theory is that physiological overloads such as exercise are intermittent, while pathological overloads such as hypertension are chronic. In this study, we hypothesized that the nature of the stress on the heart, rather than its duration, is the key determinant of the maladaptive phenotype. To test this, we applied intermittent pressure overload on the hearts of mice and tested the roles of duration and nature of the stress on the development of cardiac failure. Despite a mild hypertrophic response, preserved systolic function, and a favorable fetal gene expression profile, hearts exposed to intermittent pressure overload displayed pathological features. Importantly, intermittent pressure overload caused diastolic dysfunction, altered beta-adrenergic receptor (beta AR) function, and vascular rarefaction before the development of cardiac hypertrophy, which were largely normalized by preventing the recruitment of PI3K by beta AR kinase 1 to ligand-activated receptors. Thus stress-induced activation of pathogenic signaling pathways, not the duration of stress or the hypertrophic growth per se, is the molecular trigger of cardiac dysfunction.

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