Anti-phospholamban antibody stimulated Ca2+ uptake equally in normal (1.93-fold) and failing (1.94-fold) human hearts, showing this mechanism is unaltered in idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy.
21 human myocardial tissue samples (7 from normal donors and 14 from patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy) were analyzed to compare phospholamban-mediated stimulation of Ca2+ uptake.
Anti-phospholamban monoclonal antibody vs Absence of antibody (0.05 mg/ml)
Stimulation of Ca2+ uptake at 0.2 µM Ca2+ — 1.93-fold (normal) and 1.94-fold (failing)
Effect estimate: 1.93-fold (normal) and 1.94-fold (failing)
Studies in animal models have suggested that alterations affecting phospholamban-mediated stimulation of Ca2+ uptake by sarcoplasmic reticulum are involved in the pathophysiology of heart disease. A monoclonal antibody that binds to phospholamban and stimulates Ca2+ uptake was used to characterize phospholamban-mediated effects in human cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum and to compare these effects in tissue from normal and failing hearts. Stimulation of Ca2+ uptake by anti-phospholamban monoclonal antibody simulated the effect of phosphorylation of phospholamban by cAMP-dependent protein kinase. Binding of anti-phospholamban antibody reduced the K0.5 of the Ca2(+)-transporting ATPase from 0.53 microM ( Ca2+) to 0.29 microM ( Ca2+), without affecting Vmax or nHill. At 0.2 microM Ca2+, stimulation was 1.93-fold in sarcoplasmic reticulum prepared from normal human left ventricular myocardium and 1.94-fold in sarcoplasmic reticulum prepared from the left ventricular myocardium of patients with heart failure resulting from idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy. Stimulation of Ca2+ uptake in canine cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum under identical conditions was 1.89-fold. Phospholamban-mediated stimulation of Ca2+ uptake in human cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum is thus comparable in magnitude to that observed in other species and results from an increase in the apparent affinity of the Ca2(+)-transporting ATPase for Ca2+. The pathogenesis of heart failure in idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy does not, however, appear to involve intrinsic alterations of this mechanism.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Matthew A. Movsesian
Intermountain Healthcare
John Colyer
Amgen (United States)
J H Wang
University of Calgary
Journal of Clinical Investigation
University of Utah
University of Calgary
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Movsesian et al. (Tue,) conducted a other in Idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (n=21). Anti-phospholamban monoclonal antibody vs. Absence of antibody was evaluated on Stimulation of Ca2+ uptake at 0.2 µM Ca2+ (1.93-fold (normal) and 1.94-fold (failing)). Anti-phospholamban antibody stimulated Ca2+ uptake equally in normal (1.93-fold) and failing (1.94-fold) human hearts, showing this mechanism is unaltered in idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a22e4f68e9235474b207b2d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1172/jci114623