Remodeling of the Cardiac Pacemaker L-Type Calcium Current and Its β-Adrenergic Responsiveness in Hypertension After Neuronal NO Synthase Gene Transfer
- 1 September 2006
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Hypertension
- Vol. 48 (3) , 443-452
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.hyp.0000233383.04280.3c
Abstract
Hypertension is associated with abnormal neurohumoral activation. We tested the hypothesis that β-adrenergic hyperresponsiveness in the sinoatrial node (SAN) of the spontaneously hypertensive rat occurs at the level of the L-type calcium current because of altered cyclic nucleotide-dependent signaling. Furthermore, we hypothesized that NO, a modulator of cGMP and cAMP, would normalize the β-adrenergic phenotype in the hypertensive rat. Chronotropic responsiveness to norepinephrine (NE), together with production of cAMP and cGMP, was assessed in isolated atrial preparations from age-matched hypertensive and normotensive rats. Right atrial/SAN pacemaking tissue was injected with adenovirus encoding enhanced green fluorescent protein (control vector) or neuronal NO synthase (nNOS). In addition, L-type calcium current was measured in cells isolated from the SAN of transfected animals. Basal levels of cGMP were lower in hypertensive rat atria. These atria were hyperresponsive to NE at all of the concentrations tested, with elevated production of cAMP. This was accompanied by increased basal and norepinephrine-stimulated L-type calcium current. Using enhanced green fluorescent protein, we observed transgene expression within both tissue sections and isolated pacemaking cells. Adenoviral nNOS increased right atrial nNOS protein expression and cGMP content. NE-stimulated cAMP concentration and L-type calcium current were also attenuated by adenoviral nNOS, along with the chronotropic responsiveness to NE in hypertensive rat atria. Decreased calcium current after cardiac nNOS gene transfer contributes to the normalization of β-adrenergic hyperresponsiveness in the SAN from hypertensive rats by modulating cyclic nucleotide signaling.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Enhanced Oxidative Stress and Impaired Thioredoxin Expression in Spontaneously Hypertensive RatsAntioxidants and Redox Signaling, 2004
- Neurogenic Hypertension: Is the Enigma of Its Origin Near the Solution?Hypertension, 2004
- Cardiac Nitric Oxide Synthase 1 Regulates Basal and β-Adrenergic Contractility in Murine Ventricular MyocytesCirculation, 2002
- Nitric oxide‐cGMP pathway facilitates acetylcholine release and bradycardia during vagal nerve stimulation in the guinea‐pig in vitroThe Journal of Physiology, 2001
- Localisation and functional significance of ryanodine receptors during β-adrenoceptor stimulation in the guinea-pig sino-atrial nodeCardiovascular Research, 2000
- Heart-Rate Recovery Immediately after Exercise as a Predictor of MortalityNew England Journal of Medicine, 1999
- Regulation of cardiac β-adrenergic response by nitric oxideCardiovascular Research, 1999
- Baroreflex sensitivity and heart-rate variability in prediction of total cardiac mortality after myocardial infarctionPublished by Elsevier ,1998
- Electrophysiological Basis for the Enhanced Cardiac Arrhythmogenic Effect of Isoprenaline in Aged Spontaneously Hypertensive RatsJournal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology, 1994
- Plasma Norepinephrine as a Guide to Prognosis in Patients with Chronic Congestive Heart FailureNew England Journal of Medicine, 1984