AI Article Synopsis

  • Aldosterone plays a role in regulating electrolyte balance and may contribute to heart remodeling after injury, particularly by increasing collagen and elastin production in cardiac fibroblasts.
  • When human cardiac fibroblasts are treated with aldosterone, there is a dose-dependent rise in collagen type I and elastin synthesis, but while spironolactone inhibits collagen production, it does not affect elastin levels.
  • The study also found that aldosterone's ability to stimulate elastin production involves the insulin-like growth factor-I receptor signaling pathway, independent of the mineralocorticoid receptor.

Article Abstract

Aldosterone is known to regulate electrolyte homeostasis, but it may also contribute to other processes, including the maladaptive remodeling of postinfarct hearts. Because aldosterone has been implicated in the stimulation of collagen production in the heart, we investigated whether it would also affect elastin deposition in cultures of human cardiac fibroblasts. We first demonstrated that treatment with 1 to 50 nmol/L aldosterone leads to a significant increase in collagen type I mRNA levels and in subsequent collagen fiber deposition. Pretreatment of cells with the mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist spironolactone, but not with the glucocorticoid receptor antagonist RU 486, inhibited collagen synthesis in aldosterone-treated cultures. Most importantly, we demonstrated that aldosterone also increases elastin mRNA levels, tropoelastin synthesis, and elastic fiber deposition in a dose-dependent manner. Strikingly, neither spironolactone nor RU 486 eliminated aldosterone-induced increases in elastin production. We further discovered that the proelastogenic effect of aldosterone involves a rapid increase in tyrosine phosphorylation of the insulin-like growth factor-I receptor and that the insulin-like growth factor-I receptor kinase inhibitor AG1024 or an anti-insulin-like growth factor-I receptor-neutralizing antibody inhibits both insulin-like growth factor-I and aldosterone-induced elastogenesis. Thus, we have demonstrated for the first time that aldosterone, which stimulates collagen production through the mineralocorticoid receptor-dependent pathway, also increases elastogenesis via a parallel mineralocorticoid receptor-independent pathway involving I insulin-like growth factor-I receptor signaling.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1959490PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2353/ajpath.2007.070101DOI Listing

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