Author:
Dey Swati,Joshi Pooja,O’Rourke Brian,Estes Shanea,DeMazumder Deeptankar
Abstract
ABSTRACTRATIONALESudden cardiac arrest (SCA) and heart failure (HF) are leading causes of death. The underlying mechanisms are incompletely understood, limiting the design of new therapies. Whereas most autonomic modulation therapies have not shown clear benefit in HF patients, growing evidence indicates cardiac sympathetic denervation (CSD) exerts cardioprotective effects. The underlying molecular and cellular mechanisms remain unexplored.OBJECTIVEBased on the hypothesis that mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (mROS) drive the pathogenesis of HF and SCA, we investigated whether CSD prevents SCA and HF by improving mitochondrial antioxidant capacity and redox balance, to correct impaired Ca2+handling and repolarization reserve.METHODS AND RESULTSWe interrogated CSD-specific responses in pressure-overload HF models with spontaneous SCA usingin vivoechocardiographic and electrocardiographic studies andin vitrobiochemical and functional studies including ratiometric measures of mROS, Ca2+and sarcomere dynamics in left ventricular myocytes. Pressure-overloaded HF reduced mitochondrial antioxidant capacity and increased mROS, which impaired β-adrenergic signaling and caused SR Ca2+leak, reducing SR Ca2+and increasing diastolic Ca2+, impaired myofilament contraction and further increased the sympathetic stress response. CSD improved contractile function and mitigated mROS-mediated diastolic Ca2+overload, dispersion of repolarization, triggered activity and SCA by upregulating mitochondrial antioxidant and NADPH-producing enzymes.CONCLUSIONSOur findings support a fundamental role of sympathetic stress-induced downregulation of mROS scavenging enzymes and RyR-leak mediated diastolic Ca2+overload in HF and SCA pathogenesis that are mitigated by CSD. This first report on the molecular and cellular mechanisms of CSD supports its evaluation in additional high-risk patient groups.BRIEF SUMMARYCardiac sympathetic denervation (CSD) confers cardioprotective effects via unclear mechanisms. In a guinea pig model that uniquely mimics human pressure-overload heart failure (HF) with spontaneous sudden cardiac arrest (SCA), we interrogated CSD-specific responses using echocardiographic, electrocardiographic and biochemical measures, and ratiometric measures of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (mROS), Ca2+and sarcomere dynamics. Consistent with our hypothesis, CSD rescued cardioprotection by upregulating mitochondrial antioxidant and NADPH-producing enzymes, which mitigate mROS-mediated Ca2+derangements, repolarization lability, triggered activity, HF and SCA. Our findings provide the first molecular and cellular mechanistic basis for evaluating CSD therapy in a broader group of high-risk patients.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory