AJP - Heart Calcium Transients and Cell-Sarcomere
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Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 287: H286-H292, 2004. First published December 23, 2003; doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00479.2002
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Elafin-overexpressing mice have improved cardiac function after myocardial infarction

Kunio Ohta,1 Takanori Nakajima,1 Alexander Y. L. Cheah,1 Syed H. E. Zaidi,1 Nilo Kaviani,1 Fayez Dawood,2 Xiao-Mang You,2 Peter Liu,2 Mansoor Husain,2 and Marlene Rabinovitch1

1Program in Cardiovascular Research, The Hospital for Sick Children, and Department of Pediatrics, Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology, and Medicine, University of Toronto; and 2Center for Cardiovascular Research, The Toronto Hospital Network, Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada M5G 1X8

Submitted 7 June 2002 ; accepted in final form 19 December 2003

Elevated serine elastase activity after myocardial infarction can contribute to remodeling associated with left ventricular dilatation and dysfunction. We therefore assessed the effects of overexpressing the selective serine elastase inhibitor elafin in transgenic mice in which a myocardial infarction was caused by ligation of the left anterior descending coronary artery (LAD). Elevated serine elastase activity was observed in nontransgenic littermates as early as 6 h after LAD ligation and persisted at 4 and 7 days but not in sham-operated or elafin-overexpressing transgenic mice. Myeloperoxidase activity (index of inflammatory cells) and matrix metalloproteinase 2 were also increased but only at 4 and 7 days and only in nontransgenic mice (P < 0.05 for both comparisons), and this increase correlated with inflammatory cell infiltration. Echocardiographic study at 4 days revealed indexes of diastolic dysfunction in nontransgenic versus elafin-overexpressing mice (P < 0.05). Morphometric and biochemical analyses at 28 days indicated impairment in cardiac performance, with greater scar thinning and infarct expansion in nontransgenic versus elafin transgenic littermates (P < 0.05 for all comparisons). Thus serine elastase inhibition appears to suppress inflammation, cardiac dilatation, and dysfunction after myocardial infarct.

elastase; metalloproteinase; myocardial infarction; remodeling; transgenic mice



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: M. Rabinovitch, Stanford Univ. School of Medicine, CCSR-2245B, 269 Campus Dr., Stanford, CA 94305-5162 (E-mail: marlener{at}stanford.edu).




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