Is alpha-MyHC mRNA expression altered in the left ventricular free walls of patients with chronic end-stage heart failure compared to nonfailing hearts?
33 human subjects, including 14 heart donor candidates with no history of cardiovascular disease or structural cardiovascular abnormalities (7 nonfailing hearts, 7 with donor heart dysfunction) and 19 patients undergoing cardiac transplantation for chronic end-stage heart failure.
Nonfailing hearts and hearts with donor heart dysfunction
Relative amounts of alpha- and beta-MyHC mRNA in the left ventricular free wallssurrogate
Alpha-MyHC mRNA is expressed in considerable amounts in normal human hearts but is significantly decreased in chronic end-stage heart failure, suggesting a molecular basis for systolic dysfunction.
Two isoforms of myosin heavy chain (MyHC), alpha and beta, exist in the mammalian ventricular myocardium, and their relative expression is correlated with the contractile velocity of cardiac muscle. Several pathologic stimuli can cause a shift in the MyHC composition of the rodent ventricle from alpha- to beta-MyHC. Given the potential physiological consequences of cardiac MyHC isoform shifts, we determined MyHC gene expression in human heart failure where cardiac contractility is impaired significantly. In this study, we quantitated the relative amounts of alpha- and beta-MyHC mRNA in the left ventricular free walls (LVs) of 14 heart donor candidates with no history of cardiovascular disease or structural cardiovascular abnormalities. This group consisted of seven patients with nonfailing (NF) hearts and seven patients with hearts that exhibited donor heart dysfunction (DHD). These were compared with 19 patients undergoing cardiac transplantation for chronic end-stage heart failure (F). The relative amounts of alpha-MyHC mRNA to total (i.e., alpha + beta) MyHC mRNA in the NF- and DHD-LVs were surprisingly high compared with previous reports (33.3+/-18.9 and 35.4+/-16.5%, respectively), and were significantly higher than those in the F-LVs, regardless of the cause of heart failure (2.2+/-3.5%, P < 0.0001). There was no significant difference in the ratios in NF- and DHD-LVs. Our results demonstrate that a considerable amount of alpha-MyHC mRNA is expressed in the normal heart, and is decreased significantly in chronic end-stage heart failure. If protein and enzymatic activity correlate with mRNA expression, this molecular alteration may be sufficient to explain systolic dysfunction in F-LVs, and therapeutics oriented towards increasing alpha-MyHC gene expression may be feasible.
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Kōichi Nakao
Kurume University
Wayne Minobe
Heart Failure / Cardiomyopathy
Robert L. Roden
University of Colorado Hospital
Journal of Clinical Investigation
University of Colorado Boulder
University of Colorado Denver
University of Colorado Health
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Nakao et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d5724675589c71d767e6a2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1172/jci119776
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