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Anti-Remodeling Effects of Rapamycin in Experimental Heart Failure: Dose Response and Interaction with Angiotensin Receptor Blockade

While neurohumoral antagonists improve outcomes in heart failure (HF), cardiac remodeling and dysfunction progress and outcomes remain poor. Therapies superior or additive to standard HF therapy are needed. Pharmacologic mTOR inhibition by rapamycin attenuated adverse cardiac remodeling and dysfunct...

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Autores principales: Bishu, Kalkidan, Ogut, Ozgur, Kushwaha, Sudhir, Mohammed, Selma F., Ohtani, Tomohito, Xu, Xiaolei, Brozovich, Frank V., Redfield, Margaret M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3849273/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24312548
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0081325
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author Bishu, Kalkidan
Ogut, Ozgur
Kushwaha, Sudhir
Mohammed, Selma F.
Ohtani, Tomohito
Xu, Xiaolei
Brozovich, Frank V.
Redfield, Margaret M.
author_facet Bishu, Kalkidan
Ogut, Ozgur
Kushwaha, Sudhir
Mohammed, Selma F.
Ohtani, Tomohito
Xu, Xiaolei
Brozovich, Frank V.
Redfield, Margaret M.
author_sort Bishu, Kalkidan
collection PubMed
description While neurohumoral antagonists improve outcomes in heart failure (HF), cardiac remodeling and dysfunction progress and outcomes remain poor. Therapies superior or additive to standard HF therapy are needed. Pharmacologic mTOR inhibition by rapamycin attenuated adverse cardiac remodeling and dysfunction in experimental heart failure (HF). However, these studies used rapamycin doses that produced blood drug levels targeted for primary immunosuppression in human transplantation and therefore the immunosuppressive effects may limit clinical translation. Further, the relative or incremental effect of rapamycin combined with standard HF therapies targeting upstream regulators of cardiac remodeling (neurohumoral antagonists) has not been defined. Our objectives were to determine if anti-remodeling effects of rapamycin were preserved at lower doses and whether rapamycin effects were similar or additive to a standard HF therapy (angiotensin receptor blocker (losartan)). Experimental murine HF was produced by transverse aortic constriction (TAC). At three weeks post-TAC, male mice with established HF were treated with placebo, rapamycin at a dose producing immunosuppressive drug levels (target dose), low dose (50% target dose) rapamycin, losartan or rapamycin + losartan for six weeks. Cardiac structure and function (echocardiography, catheterization, pathology, hypertrophic and fibrotic gene expression profiles) were assessed. Downstream mTOR signaling pathways regulating protein synthesis (S6K1 and S6) and autophagy (LC3B-II) were characterized. TAC-HF mice displayed eccentric hypertrophy, systolic dysfunction and pulmonary congestion. These perturbations were attenuated to a similar degree by oral rapamycin doses achieving target (13.3±2.1 ng/dL) or low (6.7±2.5 ng/dL) blood levels. Rapamycin treatment decreased mTOR mediated regulators of protein synthesis and increased mTOR mediated regulators of autophagy. Losartan monotherapy did not attenuate remodeling, whereas Losartan added to rapamycin provided no incremental benefit over rapamycin alone. These data lend support to investigation of low dose rapamycin as a novel therapy in human HF.
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spelling pubmed-38492732013-12-05 Anti-Remodeling Effects of Rapamycin in Experimental Heart Failure: Dose Response and Interaction with Angiotensin Receptor Blockade Bishu, Kalkidan Ogut, Ozgur Kushwaha, Sudhir Mohammed, Selma F. Ohtani, Tomohito Xu, Xiaolei Brozovich, Frank V. Redfield, Margaret M. PLoS One Research Article While neurohumoral antagonists improve outcomes in heart failure (HF), cardiac remodeling and dysfunction progress and outcomes remain poor. Therapies superior or additive to standard HF therapy are needed. Pharmacologic mTOR inhibition by rapamycin attenuated adverse cardiac remodeling and dysfunction in experimental heart failure (HF). However, these studies used rapamycin doses that produced blood drug levels targeted for primary immunosuppression in human transplantation and therefore the immunosuppressive effects may limit clinical translation. Further, the relative or incremental effect of rapamycin combined with standard HF therapies targeting upstream regulators of cardiac remodeling (neurohumoral antagonists) has not been defined. Our objectives were to determine if anti-remodeling effects of rapamycin were preserved at lower doses and whether rapamycin effects were similar or additive to a standard HF therapy (angiotensin receptor blocker (losartan)). Experimental murine HF was produced by transverse aortic constriction (TAC). At three weeks post-TAC, male mice with established HF were treated with placebo, rapamycin at a dose producing immunosuppressive drug levels (target dose), low dose (50% target dose) rapamycin, losartan or rapamycin + losartan for six weeks. Cardiac structure and function (echocardiography, catheterization, pathology, hypertrophic and fibrotic gene expression profiles) were assessed. Downstream mTOR signaling pathways regulating protein synthesis (S6K1 and S6) and autophagy (LC3B-II) were characterized. TAC-HF mice displayed eccentric hypertrophy, systolic dysfunction and pulmonary congestion. These perturbations were attenuated to a similar degree by oral rapamycin doses achieving target (13.3±2.1 ng/dL) or low (6.7±2.5 ng/dL) blood levels. Rapamycin treatment decreased mTOR mediated regulators of protein synthesis and increased mTOR mediated regulators of autophagy. Losartan monotherapy did not attenuate remodeling, whereas Losartan added to rapamycin provided no incremental benefit over rapamycin alone. These data lend support to investigation of low dose rapamycin as a novel therapy in human HF. Public Library of Science 2013-12-03 /pmc/articles/PMC3849273/ /pubmed/24312548 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0081325 Text en © 2013 Bishu et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Bishu, Kalkidan
Ogut, Ozgur
Kushwaha, Sudhir
Mohammed, Selma F.
Ohtani, Tomohito
Xu, Xiaolei
Brozovich, Frank V.
Redfield, Margaret M.
Anti-Remodeling Effects of Rapamycin in Experimental Heart Failure: Dose Response and Interaction with Angiotensin Receptor Blockade
title Anti-Remodeling Effects of Rapamycin in Experimental Heart Failure: Dose Response and Interaction with Angiotensin Receptor Blockade
title_full Anti-Remodeling Effects of Rapamycin in Experimental Heart Failure: Dose Response and Interaction with Angiotensin Receptor Blockade
title_fullStr Anti-Remodeling Effects of Rapamycin in Experimental Heart Failure: Dose Response and Interaction with Angiotensin Receptor Blockade
title_full_unstemmed Anti-Remodeling Effects of Rapamycin in Experimental Heart Failure: Dose Response and Interaction with Angiotensin Receptor Blockade
title_short Anti-Remodeling Effects of Rapamycin in Experimental Heart Failure: Dose Response and Interaction with Angiotensin Receptor Blockade
title_sort anti-remodeling effects of rapamycin in experimental heart failure: dose response and interaction with angiotensin receptor blockade
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3849273/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24312548
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0081325
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