Abstract
AbstractBackgroundCurrently, the early pre-clinical detection of left ventricular (LV) dysfunction is difficult as biomarkers are not specific for the cardiomyopathic process. The underlying molecular mechanisms leading to heart failure remain elusive, highlighting the need for identification of cardiac-specific markers. The growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHSR) and its ligand ghrelin are present in cardiac tissue and are known to contribute to myocardial energetics. Here, we examined tissue ghrelin-GHSR levels as specific markers of cardiac dysfunction in patients who underwent cardiac transplantation.Methods and ResultsSamples of cardiac tissue were obtained from 10 cardiac transplant patients at the time of organ harvesting, and during serial post-transplant biopsies. Quantitative fluorescence microscopy using a novel fluorescent ghrelin analog was used to measure levels of GHSR, and immunofluorescence was used to measure levels of ghrelin, b-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) and tissue markers of cardiomyocyte contractility and growth. GHSR and ghrelin expression levels were highly variable in the explanted heart, less in the grafted heart biopsies. GHSR and ghrelin were strongly positively correlated, and both markers were negatively correlated with LV ejection fraction. Ghrelin had stronger positive correlations than BNP with the signaling markers for contractility and growth.ConclusionsThese data suggest that GHSR-ghrelin have potential use as an integrated marker of cardiac dysfunction. Interestingly, tissue ghrelin appeared to be a more sensitive indicator than BNP to the biochemical processes that are characteristic of heart failure. This work allows for further use of ghrelin-GHSR to interrogate cardiac-specific biochemical mechanisms in pre-clinical stages of HF.PrecisThis study shows the relationships between GHSR, ghrelin, and signaling molecules with relation to heart function in human heart failure with tissue from diseased heart and healthy heart biopsies.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory