PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Preserved cardiac function despite marked impairment of cAMP generation.

  • Mei Hua Gao,
  • Ngai Chin Lai,
  • Tong Tang,
  • Tracy Guo,
  • Ruoying Tang,
  • Byeong Jo Chun,
  • Hong Wang,
  • Nancy N Dalton,
  • Jorge Suarez,
  • Wolfgang H Dillmann,
  • H Kirk Hammond

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072151
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 9
p. e72151

Abstract

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So many clinical trials of positive inotropes have failed, that it is now axiomatic that agents that increase cAMP are deleterious to the failing heart. An alternative strategy is to alter myocardial Ca(2+) handling or myofilament response to Ca(2+) using agents that do not affect cAMP. Although left ventricular (LV) function is tightly linked to adenylyl cyclase (AC) activity, the beneficial effects of AC may be independent of cAMP and instead stem from effects on Ca(2+) handling. Here we ask whether an AC mutant molecule that reduces LV cAMP production would have favorable effects on LV function through its effects on Ca(2+) handling alone.We generated transgenic mice with cardiac-directed expression of an AC6 mutant (AC6mut). Cardiac myocytes showed impaired cAMP production in response to isoproterenol (74% reduction; p<0.001), but LV size and function were normal. Isolated hearts showed preserved LV function in response to isoproterenol stimulation. AC6mut expression was associated with increased sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+) uptake and the EC50 for SERCA2a activation was reduced. Cardiac myocytes isolated from AC6mut mice showed increased amplitude of Ca(2+) transients in response to isoproterenol (p = 0.0001). AC6mut expression also was associated with increased expression of LV S100A1 (p = 0.03) and reduced expression of phospholamban protein (p = 0.01).LV AC mutant expression is associated with normal cardiac function despite impaired cAMP generation. The mechanism appears to be through effects on Ca(2+) handling - effects that occur despite diminished cAMP.