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1Lilly Research Laboratories, Eli Lilly and Company, Indianapolis, Indiana; and 2Institute of Molecular and Experimental Therapeutics, East China Normal University, Shanghai, China
Submitted 2 August 2006 ; accepted in final form 17 February 2007
In congestive heart failure (CHF), coronary vascular relaxation is associated with endothelial dysfunction and nitric oxide (NO) deficiency. This study explored the reversibility of this process in hearts recovering from CHF and its related mechanisms. Dogs were chronically instrumented to measure cardiac function and coronary blood flow (CBF). Heart failure was induced by right ventricular pacing at 240 beats/min for 34 wk, and cardiac recovery (CR) was allowed by the termination of cardiac pacing for 34 wk after the development of CHF, in which left ventricular contractile function was restored by 8090%. The endothelium-dependent CBF response to bradykinin and acetylcholine was depressed in CHF and fully restored in CR. Myocardial NOx (nitrate/nitrite), endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) mRNA expression, total protein, and phosphorylated eNOS decreased significantly in failing hearts. However, myocardial NOx recovered to 78% of control and phosphorylated eNOS was fully restored in CR, despite the fact that eNOS mRNA expression and protein levels remained lower than control. Furthermore, the endothelium-independent CBF response to nitroglycerin did not change in CHF; however, it increased by 75% in CR, in conjunction with a near threefold increase in the phosphorylation of vasodilation-stimulated phosphoprotein (VASP) at Ser239 in recovering hearts. Thus the complete restoration of endothelium-dependent coronary vascular relaxation during cardiac recovery from CHF was mediated by 1) a restoration of phosphorylated eNOS for partial recovery of the NO production and 2) an increase in cGMP/cGMP-dependent protein kinase-I pathway signaling activity for the enhancement of coronary vascular smooth muscle relaxation in response to NO.
congestive heart failure; endothelial nitric oxide synthase; cGMP-dependent protein kinase-I; vasodilation-stimulated phosphoprotein; coronary blood flow; cardiac recovery
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