Effect of aging and hypertension on myosin biochemistry and gene expression in the rat heart.

Author:

Buttrick P1,Malhotra A1,Factor S1,Greenen D1,Leinwand L1,Scheuer J1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Montefiore Medical Center, Bronx, N.Y. 10467.

Abstract

The mechanisms by which the aged heart adapts to a superimposed pressure load such as hypertension have not been described. We therefore investigated biochemical and molecular genetic adaptations in the 24-month-old rat heart subjected to renovascular hypertension. Compared with 4-month-old rats, aging was associated with a 68% increase in left ventricular mass without any change in heart weight-to-body weight ratio, a 33% reduction in calcium-activated myosin ATPase activity, and a shift from a V1 to a V3 predominant myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoform distribution. A 46% reduction in alpha-MHC mRNA and a reciprocal increase in beta-MHC mRNA was seen. When hypertension was superimposed, there was a further 75% increase in ventricular mass, a 63% increase in heart weight-to-body weight ratio, and a 19% reduction in myosin ATPase. Myosin isozyme distribution was further shifted to V3, and the ratio of alpha-MHC to beta-MHC mRNA was reduced. In addition, with hypertension a significant (greater than 50%) reduction in the mRNA level of the cardiac sarcoplasmic reticular calcium-activated ATPase was seen. These data demonstrate that the aged myocardium is able to respond to a superimposed pressure load with a molecular genetic and protein synthetic pattern of hypertrophy analogous to that seen in younger animals.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

Reference38 articles.

1. Cardiac Muscle Changes in Senescence

2. Myocyte cell loss and myocyte hypertrophy in the aging rat heart

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4. Effects of age on mechanical and electrical performance of rat myocardium;Capasso JM;Am J Physiol,1983

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