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Ranolazine Improves Cardiac Diastolic Dysfunction Through Modulation of Myofilament Calcium Sensitivity

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posted on 2013-11-19, 00:00 authored by Joshua D. Lovelock, Michelle M. Monasky, Euy-Myoung Jeong, Harvey A. Lardin, Hong Liu, Bindiya G. Patel, Domenico M. Taglieri, Lianzhi Gu, Praveen Kumar, Narayan Pokhrel, Dewan Zeng, Luiz Belardinelli, Dan Sorescu, R. John Solaro, Samuel C. Jr Dudley
RATIONALE: Previously, we demonstrated that a deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA)-salt hypertensive mouse model produces cardiac oxidative stress and diastolic dysfunction with preserved systolic function. Oxidative stress has been shown to increase late inward sodium current (I(Na)), reducing the net cytosolic Ca(2+) efflux. OBJECTIVE: Oxidative stress in the DOCA-salt model may increase late I(Na), resulting in diastolic dysfunction amenable to treatment with ranolazine. METHODS AND RESULTS: Echocardiography detected evidence of diastolic dysfunction in hypertensive mice that improved after treatment with ranolazine (E/E':sham, 31.9 ± 2.8, sham+ranolazine, 30.2 ± 1.9, DOCA-salt, 41.8 ± 2.6, and DOCA-salt+ranolazine, 31.9 ± 2.6; P=0.018). The end-diastolic pressure-volume relationship slope was elevated in DOCA-salt mice, improving to sham levels with treatment (sham, 0.16 ± 0.01 versus sham+ranolazine, 0.18 ± 0.01 versus DOCA-salt, 0.23 ± 0.2 versus DOCA-salt+ranolazine, 0.17 ± 0.0 1 mm Hg/L; P<0.005). DOCA-salt myocytes demonstrated impaired relaxation, τ, improving with ranolazine (DOCA-salt, 0.18 ± 0.02, DOCA-salt+ranolazine, 0.13 ± 0.01, sham, 0.11 ± 0.01, sham+ranolazine, 0.09 ± 0.02 seconds; P=0.0004). Neither late I(Na) nor the Ca(2+) transients were different from sham myocytes. Detergent extracted fiber bundles from DOCA-salt hearts demonstrated increased myofilament response to Ca(2+) with glutathionylation of myosin binding protein C. Treatment with ranolazine ameliorated the Ca(2+) response and cross-bridge kinetics. CONCLUSIONS: Diastolic dysfunction could be reversed by ranolazine, probably resulting from a direct effect on myofilaments, indicating that cardiac oxidative stress may mediate diastolic dysfunction through altering the contractile apparatus.

Funding

This study was supported by grants R01 HL085558, R01 HL073753, P01 HL058000, and a Veterans Affairs MERIT grant (S.C.D.); T32 HL007692 (J.D.L., M.M.M.); R01 HL090851 and ARRA supplement R01HL090851–02S1 (D.S.); and HL022231, RO1 HL064035, and PO1 HL062426 (R.J.S.).

History

Publisher Statement

This is a copy of an article published in the Circulation Research © 2012 American Heart Association available at http://circres.ahajournals.org/

Publisher

Circulation Research

Language

  • en_US

issn

1524-4571

Issue date

2012-03-01

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