Myocytes Die by Multiple Mechanisms in Failing Human Hearts

Author:

Kostin Sawa1,Pool Lieven1,Elsässer Albrecht1,Hein Stefan1,Drexler Hannes C.A.1,Arnon Eyal1,Hayakawa Yukihiro1,Zimmermann René1,Bauer Erwin1,Klövekorn Wolf-Peter1,Schaper Jutta1

Affiliation:

1. From the Departments of Experimental Cardiology (S.K., L.P., E.A., Y.H., J.S.) and Molecular Cell Biology (H.C.A.D.), Max-Planck-Institute, Bad Nauheim, Germany; Departments of Cardiac Surgery (S.H., R.Z., E.B., W.-P.K.) and Vascular Genomics (R.Z.), Kerckhoff-Clinic, Bad Nauheim, Germany; and the Department of Cardiology (A.E.), University of Freiburg, Germany.

Abstract

We tested the hypothesis that myocyte loss in failing human hearts occurs by different mechanisms: apoptosis, oncosis, and autophagic cell death. Explanted hearts from 19 patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (EF≤20%) and 7 control hearts were analyzed. Myocyte apoptosis revealed by caspase-3 activation and TUNEL staining occurred at a rate of 0.002±0.0005% ( P <0.05 versus control) and oncosis assessed by complement 9 labeling at 0.06±0.001% ( P <0.05). Cellular degeneration including appearance of ubiquitin containing autophagic vacuoles and nuclear disintegration was present at the ultrastructural level. Nuclear and cytosolic ubiquitin/protein accumulations occurred at 0.08±0.004% ( P <0.05). The ubiquitin-activating enzyme E1 and the ligase E3 were not different from control. In contrast, ubiquitin mRNA levels were 1.8-fold ( P <0.02) elevated, and the conjugating enzyme E2 was 2.3-fold upregulated ( P <0.005). The most important finding, however, is the 2.3-fold downregulation of the deubiquitination enzyme isopeptidase-T and the 1.5-fold reduction of the ubiquitin-fusion degradation system-1, which in conjunction with unchanged proteasomal subunit levels and proteasomal activity results in massive storage of ubiquitin/protein complexes and in autophagic cell death. A 2-fold decrease of cathepsin D might be an additional factor responsible for the accumulation of ubiquitin/protein conjugates. It is concluded that in human failing hearts apoptosis, oncosis, and autophagy act in parallel to varying degrees. A disturbed balance between a high rate of ubiquitination and inadequate degradation of ubiquitin/protein conjugates may contribute to autophagic cell death. Together, these different types of cell death play a significant role for myocyte disappearance and the development of contractile dysfunction in failing hearts.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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