Author:
Chakraborty Akash D.,Kooiker Kristi,Kobak Kamil A.,Cheng Yuanhua,Lee Chi Fung,Razumova Maria,Granzier H Henk,Regnier Michael,Rabinovitch Peter S.,Moussavi-Harami Farid,Chiao Ying Ann
Abstract
AbstractDiastolic dysfunction is a key feature of the aging heart. We have shown that late-life treatment with mTOR inhibitor, rapamycin, reverses age-related diastolic dysfunction in mice but the molecular mechanisms of the reversal remain unclear. To dissect the mechanisms by which rapamycin improves diastolic function in old mice, we examined the effects of rapamycin treatment at the levels of single cardiomyocyte, myofibril and multicellular cardiac muscle. Compared to young cardiomyocytes, isolated cardiomyocytes from old control mice exhibited prolonged time to 90% relaxation (RT90) and time to 90% Ca2+transient decay (DT90), indicating slower relaxation kinetics and calcium reuptake with age. Late-life rapamycin treatment for 10 weeks completely normalized RT90and partially normalized DT90, suggesting improved Ca2+handling contributes partially to the rapamycin-induced improved cardiomyocyte relaxation. In addition, rapamycin treatment in old mice enhanced the kinetics of sarcomere shortening and Ca2+transient increase in old control cardiomyocytes. Myofibrils from old rapamycin-treated mice displayed increased rate of the fast, exponential decay phase of relaxation compared to old controls. The improved myofibrillar kinetics were accompanied by an increase in MyBP-C phosphorylation at S282 following rapamycin treatment. We also showed that late-life rapamycin treatment normalized the age-related increase in passive stiffness of demembranated cardiac trabeculae through a mechanism independent of titin isoform shift. In summary, our results showed that rapamycin treatment normalizes the age-related impairments in cardiomyocyte relaxation, which works conjointly with reduced myocardial stiffness to reverse age-related diastolic dysfunction.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献