Mixed Messages
Open Access
- 18 March 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation Research
- Vol. 96 (5) , 592-599
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.res.0000159390.03503.c3
Abstract
In previous studies, mechanical support of medically refractory hearts with a left ventricular assist device (LVAD) has induced regression of many morphological and functional abnormalities characteristic of failing human hearts. To identify transcriptional adaptations in failing and LVAD-supported hearts, we performed a comprehensive transcription analysis using the Affymetrix microarray platform and 199 human myocardial samples from nonfailing, failing, and LVAD-supported human hearts. We also used a novel analytical strategy that defines patterns of interest based on multiple intergroup comparisons. Although over 3088 transcripts exhibited significantly altered abundance in heart failure, most of these did not exhibit a consistent response to LVAD support based on our analysis. Of those 238 with a consistent response to LVAD support, more than 75% exhibited persistence or exacerbation of HF-associated transcriptional abnormalities whereas only 11%, 5%, and 2% exhibited partial recovery, normalization, and overcorrection responses, respectively. Even among genes implicated by previous reports of LVAD-associated myocardial improvements, partial or complete normalization of transcription did not predominate. The magnitude of differences in transcript abundance between nonfailing and failing hearts, and between failing an LVAD-supported hearts, tended to be low with changes greater than or equal to 2-fold infrequently observed. Our results indicate that morphological or functional myocardial improvements may occur without widespread normalization of pathological transcriptional patterns. These observations also suggest that many failure-associated transcriptional changes have only a limited role in regulating cardiac structure and function and may represent epiphenomena and/or nonspecific myocardial plasticity responses. Differences in mRNA localization, translation efficiency, and posttranslational protein modifications or interactions may be more pivotal in regulating myocardial structure and function.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Alterations of gene expression in failing myocardium following left ventricular assist device supportPhysiological Genomics, 2003
- Effect of Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy on Left Ventricular Size and Function in Chronic Heart FailureCirculation, 2003
- Differential gene expression and genomic patient stratification following left ventricular assist device supportJournal of the American College of Cardiology, 2003
- Differential gene expression in the rat caudate putamen after “binge” cocaine administration: Advantage of triplicate microarray analysisSynapse, 2003
- Sex- and age-dependent human transcriptome variability: Implications for chronic heart failureProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2003
- Reversal mechanisms of left ventricular remodeling: Lessons from left ventricular assist device experimentsJournal of Cardiac Failure, 2002
- Downregulation of Metabolic Gene Expression in Failing Human Heart before and after Mechanical UnloadingCardiology, 2002
- Myocardial Gene Expression in Dilated Cardiomyopathy Treated with Beta-Blocking AgentsNew England Journal of Medicine, 2002
- Gene-microarray analysis of multiple sclerosis lesions yields new targets validated in autoimmune encephalomyelitisNature Medicine, 2002
- Unloaded heart in vivo replicates fetal gene expression of cardiac hypertrophyNature Medicine, 1998