AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how oxidative stress affects cardiac function by investigating the interaction between β-adrenergic signaling and redox signaling on key proteins involved in heart contraction.
  • High levels of oxidative stress led to harmful changes in regulatory proteins (MyBP-C and TnI) and resulted in decreased heart function, while moderate exercise stress improved cardiac function by enhancing protein phosphorylations.
  • Treatment with N-acetylcysteine (NAC) showed potential in reversing oxidative damage and restoring normal cardiac function under high stress conditions, highlighting the crucial role of these signaling pathways in heart health.

Article Abstract

Background: The interplay between oxidative stress and other signaling pathways in the contractile machinery regulation during cardiac stress and its consequences on cardiac function remains poorly understood. We evaluated the effect of the crosstalk between β-adrenergic and redox signaling on post-translational modifications of sarcomeric regulatory proteins, Myosin Binding Protein-C (MyBP-C) and Troponin I (TnI).

Methods And Results: We mimicked in vitro high level of physiological cardiac stress by forcing rat hearts to produce high levels of oxidized glutathione. This led to MyBP-C S-glutathionylation associated with lower protein kinase A (PKA) dependent phosphorylations of MyBP-C and TnI, increased myofilament Ca sensitivity, and decreased systolic and diastolic properties of the isolated perfused heart. Moderate physiological cardiac stress achieved in vivo with a single 35 min exercise (Low stress induced by exercise, LSE) increased TnI and cMyBP-C phosphorylations and improved cardiac function in vivo (echocardiography) and ex-vivo (isolated perfused heart). High stress induced by exercise (HSE) altered strongly oxidative stress markers and phosphorylations were unchanged despite increased PKA activity. HSE led to in vivo intrinsic cardiac dysfunction associated with myofilament Ca sensitivity defects. To limit protein S-glutathionylation after HSE, we treated rats with N-acetylcysteine (NAC). NAC restored the ability of PKA to modulate myofilament Ca sensitivity and prevented cardiac dysfunction observed in HSE animals.

Conclusion: Under cardiac stress, adrenergic and oxidative signaling pathways work in concert to alter myofilament properties and are key regulators of cardiac function.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2017.12.004DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cardiac stress
16
cardiac function
12
myofilament sensitivity
12
cardiac
10
protein s-glutathionylation
8
stress
8
oxidative stress
8
signaling pathways
8
physiological cardiac
8
isolated perfused
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!