24 research outputs found
Intracellular distribution of peroxynitrite during doxorubicin cardiomyopathy: evidence for selective impairment of myofibrillar creatine kinase
Cardiac peroxynitrite and protein nitration are increased during doxorubicin cardiotoxicity, but the intracellular targets and functional consequences have not been defined. We investigated the intracellular distribution of protein nitration during doxorubicin cardiotoxicity in mice. Following in vivo cardiac function assessments by echocardiography, cardiac tissues were prepared for immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy 5 days after doxorubicin (20 mg kg(−1)) or vehicle control. Increased cardiac 3-nitrotyrosine was observed using light microscopy in doxorubicin treated animals. Immunogold electron microscopy (55,000×) revealed increased myofibrillar and mitochondrial 3-nitrotyrosine levels following doxorubicin, but cellular 3-nitrotyrosine density was 2 fold higher in myofibrils. We therefore investigated the actions of peroxynitrite on intact cardiac contractile apparatus. Skinned ventricular trabeculae were exposed to physiologically relevant peroxynitrite concentrations (50 or 300 nM) for 1 h, then Ca(2+) induced contractile responses were measured in the presence of ATP (4 mM) or phosphocreatine (12 mM) as high energy phosphate supplier. ATP maximal force generation was unaltered after 50 nM peroxynitrite, but phosphocreatine/ATP response was reduced (0.99±0.63 vs 1.59±0.11), suggesting selective inactivation of myofibrillar creatine kinase (MM-CK). Reduction of ATP maximal force was observed at 300 nM peroxynitrite and phosphocreatine/ATP response was further reduced (0.64±0.30). Western blotting showed concentration dependent nitration of MM-CK in treated trabeculae. Similarly, cardiac tissues from doxorubicin treated mice demonstrated increased nitration and inactivation of MM-CK compared to controls. These results demonstrate that peroxynitrite-related protein nitration are mechanistic events in doxorubicin cardiomyopathy and that the cardiac myofibril is an important oxidative target in this setting. Furthermore, MM-CK may be a uniquely vulnerable target to peroxynitrite in vivo
Specific Role of Neuronal Nitric-oxide Synthase when Tethered to the Plasma Membrane Calcium Pump in Regulating the β-Adrenergic Signal in the Myocardium*S⃞
The cardiac neuronal nitric-oxide synthase (nNOS) has been described as a
modulator of cardiac contractility. We have demonstrated previously that
isoform 4b of the sarcolemmal calcium pump (PMCA4b) binds to nNOS in the heart
and that this complex regulates β-adrenergic signal transmission in
vivo. Here, we investigated whether the nNOS-PMCA4b complex serves as a
specific signaling modulator in the heart. PMCA4b transgenic mice (PMCA4b-TG)
showed a significant reduction in nNOS and total NOS activities as well as in
cGMP levels in the heart compared with their wild type (WT) littermates. In
contrast, PMCA4b-TG hearts showed an elevation in cAMP levels compared with
the WT. Adult cardiomyocytes isolated from PMCA4b-TG mice demonstrated a
3-fold increase in Ser16 phospholamban (PLB) phosphorylation as
well as Ser22 and Ser23 cardiac troponin I (cTnI)
phosphorylation at base line compared with the WT. In addition, the relative
induction of PLB phosphorylation and cTnI phosphorylation following
isoproterenol treatment was severely reduced in PMCA4b-TG myocytes, explaining
the blunted physiological response to the β-adrenergic stimulation. In
keeping with the data from the transgenic animals, neonatal rat cardiomyocytes
overexpressing PMCA4b showed a significant reduction in nitric oxide and cGMP
levels. This was accompanied by an increase in cAMP levels, which led to an
increase in both PLB and cTnI phosphorylation at base line. Elevated cAMP
levels were likely due to the modulation of cardiac phosphodiesterase, which
determined the balance between cGMP and cAMP following PMCA4b overexpression.
In conclusion, these results showed that the nNOS-PMCA4b complex regulates
contractility via cAMP and phosphorylation of both PLB and cTnI