Nitric oxide negatively controls muscle LIM protein expression in cardiac myocytes, with the NO donor SNAP reducing MLP mRNA by 49% and protein by 52% (P<0.01).
Nitric oxide downregulates muscle LIM protein expression in cardiac myocytes, which may restrain hypertrophic growth in pathophysiological conditions like heart failure.
Effect estimate: mRNA -49%, protein -52%
p-value: p=<0.01
BACKGROUND: In chronic heart failure, myocardial expression of the inducible isoform of nitric oxide (NO) synthase (NOS2) is enhanced, leading to a sustained production of NO. We postulated that NO modulates expression of genes in cardiac myocytes that may be functionally important in the context of cardiac hypertrophy and failure. METHODS AND RESULTS: As revealed by cDNA expression array analyses, the NO donor SNAP, which has been shown previously to inhibit agonist-induced cardiac myocyte hypertrophy, downregulates expression of the cytoskeleton-associated muscle LIM protein (MLP) in endothelin-1 (ET-1)-stimulated neonatal rat cardiac myocytes. Northern blotting and immunoblotting experiments confirmed this finding and established that SNAP negatively controls MLP mRNA (-49%, P<0.01) and protein (-52%, P<0.01) abundance in ET-1-treated cardiomyocytes via cGMP-dependent protein kinase and superoxide/peroxynitrite-dependent signaling pathways. Treatment of cardiac myocytes with IL-1beta and IFN-gamma downregulated MLP expression levels via induction of NOS2. Moreover, expression levels of NOS2 and MLP were inversely correlated in the failing human heart, indicating that NOS2 may regulate MLP abundance in vitro and in vivo. Antisense oligonucleotides were used to explore the functional consequences of reduced MLP expression levels in cardiac myocytes. Like SNAP, antisense downregulation of MLP protein expression (-52%, P<0.01) blunted the increases in protein synthesis, cell size, and sarcomere organization in response to ET-1 stimulation. Conversely, overexpression of MLP augmented cell size and sarcomere organization in cardiac myocytes. CONCLUSIONS: NO negatively controls MLP expression in cardiac myocytes. Because MLP is necessary and sufficient for hypertrophy and sarcomere assembly, MLP downregulation may restrain hypertrophic growth in pathophysiological situations with increased cardiac NO production.
Heineke et al. (Tue,) conducted a other in Chronic heart failure and cardiac hypertrophy. Nitric oxide (NO) donor SNAP was evaluated on Muscle LIM protein (MLP) mRNA and protein abundance (mRNA -49%, protein -52%, p=<0.01). Nitric oxide negatively controls muscle LIM protein expression in cardiac myocytes, with the NO donor SNAP reducing MLP mRNA by 49% and protein by 52% (P<0.01).
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