Patients with atrial fibrillation undergoing the Maze procedure and control patients in normal sinus rhythm undergoing cardiac surgery
Control patients in normal sinus rhythm undergoing cardiac surgery
Myofibrillar creatine kinase (MM-CK) activity and protein oxidation markers (3-nitrotyrosine and protein carbonyls) in right atrial appendagessurrogate
Oxidative damage and altered myofibrillar energetics, specifically reduced MM-CK activity and protein nitration, may contribute to atrial contractile dysfunction in human atrial fibrillation.
BACKGROUND: Atrial fibrillation (AF) is associated with severe contractile dysfunction and structural and electrophysiological remodeling. Mechanisms responsible for impaired contractility are undefined, and current therapies do not address this dysfunction. We have found that myofibrillar creatine kinase (MM-CK), an important controller of myocyte contractility, is highly sensitive to oxidative injury, and we hypothesized that increased oxidative stress and energetic impairment during AF could contribute to contractile dysfunction. Methods and Results-- Right atrial appendages were obtained from AF patients undergoing the Maze procedure and from control patients who were in normal sinus rhythm and undergoing cardiac surgery. MM-CK activity was reduced in AF patients compared with controls (25.4+/-3.4 versus 18.2+/-3.8 micromol/mg of myofibrillar protein per minute; control versus AF; P<0.05). No reduction in total CK activity or myosin ATPase activity was detected. This selective reduction in MM-CK activity was associated with increased relative expression of the beta-myosin isoform (25+/-6 versus 63+/-5%beta, CTRL versus AF; P<0.05). Western blotting of AF myofibrillar isolates demonstrated no changes in protein composition but showed increased prevalence of protein oxidation as detected by Western blotting for 3-nitrotyrosine (peroxynitrite biomarker) and protein carbonyls (hydroxyl radical biomarker; P<0.05). Patterns of these oxidative markers were distinct, which suggests discrete chemical events and differential protein vulnerabilities in vivo. MM-CK inhibition was statistically correlated to extent of nitration (P<0.01) but not to carbonyl presence. CONCLUSIONS: The present results provide novel evidence of oxidative damage in human AF that altered myofibrillar energetics may contribute to atrial contractile dysfunction and that protein nitration may be an important participant in this condition.
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Michael J. Mihm
The Ohio State University
Fushun Yu
China Medical University
Cynthia A. Carnes
The Ohio State University
Circulation
The Ohio State University
Cleveland Clinic
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Mihm et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69f14ada2811130d0cde1f40 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.104.2.174
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