Ang II-Induced Cardiac Remodeling: Role of PI3-Kinase-Dependent Autophagy

Heart failure (HF) is a pathological state indicating insufficient blood supply to the peripheral tissues from the heart. The pathophysiology of HF is multifactorial like cardiac remodeling including cardiac hypertrophy, perivascular fibrosis and apoptosis to compensate for the heart’s inability to...

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Main Author: Zhong, Tiecheng
Format: Others
Published: North Dakota State University 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10365/28800
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spelling ndltd-ndsu.edu-oai-library.ndsu.edu-10365-288002021-09-23T17:09:32Z Ang II-Induced Cardiac Remodeling: Role of PI3-Kinase-Dependent Autophagy Zhong, Tiecheng Heart -- Hypertrophy. Heart failure. Heart failure (HF) is a pathological state indicating insufficient blood supply to the peripheral tissues from the heart. The pathophysiology of HF is multifactorial like cardiac remodeling including cardiac hypertrophy, perivascular fibrosis and apoptosis to compensate for the heart’s inability to pump enough blood. Cardiac hypertrophy is initially adaptive to hemodynamic overload; however, it chronically contributes to heart failure and sudden cardiac death. The extracellular regulatory factors and intracellular signaling pathways involved in the cardiac remodeling are not yet fully clear. PI3-kinase is an important intracellular kinase in organ size control. Cardiac overexpression of Class I PI3-kinase caused heart enlargement in transgenic mice. Autophagy as a dynamic process involving the degradation of damaged mitochondria prevents ROS overproduction which leads to the cardiac remodeling. Therefore, our aim was to study the relationship between PI3-kinases and Ang II-induced cardiac remodeling via an autophagy-dependent mechanism. Ang II significantly increased autophagy with two distinctive phases: an increasing phase at low doses and a decreasing phase at high doses in cardiomyocytes. The Ang II-induced autophagic depression was attenuated by a Class I PI3-kinase inhibitor and potentiated by Class III PI3-kinase inhibitor. Besides, Ang II-induced cardiac hypertrophy and mitochondria ROS generation were attenuated via blockade of Class I PI3-kinase or mTOR. To further validate our in vitro data, we studied the role of Class I PI3-kinase in Ang II-induced cardiac remodeling in vivo. We successfully transferred Lv-DNp85 (Class I PI3-kinase blockade) and Lv-GFP (control) into adult rat hearts and found that cardiac transfer of Lv-DNp85 did not alter Ang II-induced pressor effect, but attenuated Ang II-induced cardiac hypertrophy, perivascular fibrosis and cardiac dysfunction. Ang II-induced cardiac remodeling was associated with impaired autophagy and mitochondrial ROS overproduction, which were significantly attenuated by Lv-DNp85-induced blockade of Class I PI3-kinase. Taken together, these data suggest that Class I PI3-kinase is involved in Ang II-induced impairment of autophagy via Akt/mTOR pathway, leading to mitochondrial ROS overproduction and cardiac remodeling. These results are not only highly significant from a pathophysiological perspective, but also have important pharmacological implications in the control of cardiac hypertrophy to prevent decompensation and failure in cardiac function. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke National Institutes of Health (NIH, NS55008) 2018-08-22T20:24:39Z 2018-08-22T20:24:39Z 2018 text/dissertation movingimage/video https://hdl.handle.net/10365/28800 NDSU Policy 190.6.2 https://www.ndsu.edu/fileadmin/policy/190.pdf application/pdf video/mp4 North Dakota State University
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Heart -- Hypertrophy.
Heart failure.
spellingShingle Heart -- Hypertrophy.
Heart failure.
Zhong, Tiecheng
Ang II-Induced Cardiac Remodeling: Role of PI3-Kinase-Dependent Autophagy
description Heart failure (HF) is a pathological state indicating insufficient blood supply to the peripheral tissues from the heart. The pathophysiology of HF is multifactorial like cardiac remodeling including cardiac hypertrophy, perivascular fibrosis and apoptosis to compensate for the heart’s inability to pump enough blood. Cardiac hypertrophy is initially adaptive to hemodynamic overload; however, it chronically contributes to heart failure and sudden cardiac death. The extracellular regulatory factors and intracellular signaling pathways involved in the cardiac remodeling are not yet fully clear. PI3-kinase is an important intracellular kinase in organ size control. Cardiac overexpression of Class I PI3-kinase caused heart enlargement in transgenic mice. Autophagy as a dynamic process involving the degradation of damaged mitochondria prevents ROS overproduction which leads to the cardiac remodeling. Therefore, our aim was to study the relationship between PI3-kinases and Ang II-induced cardiac remodeling via an autophagy-dependent mechanism. Ang II significantly increased autophagy with two distinctive phases: an increasing phase at low doses and a decreasing phase at high doses in cardiomyocytes. The Ang II-induced autophagic depression was attenuated by a Class I PI3-kinase inhibitor and potentiated by Class III PI3-kinase inhibitor. Besides, Ang II-induced cardiac hypertrophy and mitochondria ROS generation were attenuated via blockade of Class I PI3-kinase or mTOR. To further validate our in vitro data, we studied the role of Class I PI3-kinase in Ang II-induced cardiac remodeling in vivo. We successfully transferred Lv-DNp85 (Class I PI3-kinase blockade) and Lv-GFP (control) into adult rat hearts and found that cardiac transfer of Lv-DNp85 did not alter Ang II-induced pressor effect, but attenuated Ang II-induced cardiac hypertrophy, perivascular fibrosis and cardiac dysfunction. Ang II-induced cardiac remodeling was associated with impaired autophagy and mitochondrial ROS overproduction, which were significantly attenuated by Lv-DNp85-induced blockade of Class I PI3-kinase. Taken together, these data suggest that Class I PI3-kinase is involved in Ang II-induced impairment of autophagy via Akt/mTOR pathway, leading to mitochondrial ROS overproduction and cardiac remodeling. These results are not only highly significant from a pathophysiological perspective, but also have important pharmacological implications in the control of cardiac hypertrophy to prevent decompensation and failure in cardiac function. === National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke === National Institutes of Health (NIH, NS55008)
author Zhong, Tiecheng
author_facet Zhong, Tiecheng
author_sort Zhong, Tiecheng
title Ang II-Induced Cardiac Remodeling: Role of PI3-Kinase-Dependent Autophagy
title_short Ang II-Induced Cardiac Remodeling: Role of PI3-Kinase-Dependent Autophagy
title_full Ang II-Induced Cardiac Remodeling: Role of PI3-Kinase-Dependent Autophagy
title_fullStr Ang II-Induced Cardiac Remodeling: Role of PI3-Kinase-Dependent Autophagy
title_full_unstemmed Ang II-Induced Cardiac Remodeling: Role of PI3-Kinase-Dependent Autophagy
title_sort ang ii-induced cardiac remodeling: role of pi3-kinase-dependent autophagy
publisher North Dakota State University
publishDate 2018
url https://hdl.handle.net/10365/28800
work_keys_str_mv AT zhongtiecheng angiiinducedcardiacremodelingroleofpi3kinasedependentautophagy
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