Viagra relatives may shrink abnormally large hearts 3
Thursday, October 22nd, 2009Study Details
PDEs, by degrading cGMP, control the strength of its signal. Normally, cGMP-dependent signaling suppresses abnormal growth in heart cells by restraining Ca2+ signals that drive hypertrophy. The research team believes that PDE signaling unbalanced by long-term strain on heart muscle distorts the “crosstalk” between Ca2+ and cGMP to promote abnormal growth. Past studies had shown at least five PDE families, PDE1-5, are present in the human heart, of which PDE1 and PDE5 are most responsible for limiting cGMP supply. Going into the current study, no one knew whether the PDE1 family was involved in hypertrophy.
Yan and colleagues found that levels of PDE1a were significantly increased in heart muscle cells in animal and individual cell models of hypertrophy. The study also confirmed that PDE1a inhibition reduces abnormal growth in heart muscle cells through their effect on cGMP.
PDE1 inhibitor IC86340 was found to reduce by at least 75 percent abnormal growth in studies of isolated rat heart muscle cells in the face of a chemical known to cause hypertrophy (phenylephrine). Yan had published in previous papers that IC86340 could inhibit the PDE1 family, but no one had ever used it to counter hypertrophy. In live mice, the study drug significantly reduced hypertrophy over control mice when both were exposed to the well established hypertrophic agent, isoproterenol.
Yan’s team also found that the combination of IC86340 and Viagra in studies of isolated heart muscle cells eliminated hypertrophy to a greater degree than either compound alone. Cell growth was measured by techniques that captured each cell’s protein production (more protein equals more growth) and the size of cells in terms of their surface area. Studies already underway are looking at the effect on hypertrophy in live mice with the genes for various PDE1 enzymes removed.
Along with Yan, efforts at the University of Rochester Medical Center were led by Clint Miller, Masayoshi Oikawa, Yujun Cai, Haodong Xu, Burns Blaxall and Jun-ichi Abe within the CVRI; Andrew Wojtovich and David Nagel in the Departments of Pharmacology and Physiology; and by Xiangbin Xu and Jian-Dong Li in the Department of Microbiology and Immunology. Also leading the effort were Vince Florio of Omeris Corp. in Seattle; Sergei Rybalkin and Joseph Beavo in the Department of Pharmacology at the University of Washington and Yiu-Fai Chen in the Department of Medicine at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. This work was supported by the American Heart Association and the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
Also moving forward, Yan’s lab is focused on revealing the role of various PDE enzymes in atherosclerosis and hypertension as well as in heart failure.
“Almost every signaling molecule involved in PDE-regulated hypertrophy in the heart – including nitric oxide, calcium and angiotensin II – are at the core of regulating blood pressure and disease-related structural changes in arteries,” Yan said. “PDE1a levels appear to influence those pathways in return, which creates the potential for PDE1 inhibitors that treat both hypertrophy in the heart and vascular diseases like hypertension and atherosclerosis.”