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Publication : The effects of neuregulin on cardiac Myosin light chain kinase gene-ablated hearts.

First Author  Chang AN Year  2013
Journal  PLoS One Volume  8
Issue  6 Pages  e66720
PubMed ID  23776695 Mgi Jnum  J:204224
Mgi Id  MGI:5529861 Doi  10.1371/journal.pone.0066720
Citation  Chang AN, et al. (2013) The effects of neuregulin on cardiac Myosin light chain kinase gene-ablated hearts. PLoS One 8(6):e66720
abstractText  BACKGROUND: Activation of ErbB2/4 receptor tyrosine kinases in cardiomyocytes by neuregulin treatment is associated with improvement in cardiac function, supporting its use in human patients with heart failure despite the lack of a specific mechanism. Neuregulin infusion in rodents increases cardiac myosin light chain kinase (cMLCK) expression and cardiac myosin regulatory light chain (RLC) phosphorylation which may improve actin-myosin interactions for contraction. We generated a cMLCK knockout mouse to test the hypothesis that cMLCK is necessary for neuregulin-induced improvement in cardiac function by increasing RLC phosphorylation. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: The cMLCK knockout mice have attenuated RLC phosphorylation and decreased cardiac performance measured as fractional shortening. Neuregulin infusion for seven days in wildtype mice increased cardiac cMLCK protein expression and RLC phosphorylation while increasing Akt phosphorylation and decreasing phospholamban phosphorylation. There was no change in fractional shortening. In contrast, neuregulin infusion in cMLCK knockout animals increased cardiac performance in the absence of cMLCK without increasing RLC phosphorylation. In addition, CaMKII signaling appeared to be enhanced in neuregulin-treated knockout mice. CONCLUSIONS: Thus, Neuregulin may improve cardiac performance in the failing heart without increasing cMLCK and RLC phosphorylation by activating other signaling pathways.
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