| First Author | Du XJ | Year | 2000 |
| Journal | Circulation | Volume | 101 |
| Issue | 1 | Pages | 71-7 |
| PubMed ID | 10618307 | Mgi Jnum | J:60080 |
| Mgi Id | MGI:1352602 | Doi | 10.1161/01.cir.101.1.71 |
| Citation | Du XJ, et al. (2000) beta(2)-adrenergic receptor overexpression exacerbates development of heart failure after aortic stenosis. Circulation 101(1):71-7 |
| abstractText | BACKGROUND: Beta-adrenergic signaling is downregulated in the failing heart, and the significance of such change remains unclear. METHODS AND RESULTS: To address the role of beta-adrenergic dysfunction in heart failure (HF), aortic stenosis (AS) was induced in wild-type (WT) and transgenic (TG) mice with cardiac targeted overexpression of beta(2)-adrenergic receptors (ARs), and animals were studied 9 weeks later. The extents of increase in systolic arterial pressure (P<0.01 versus controls), left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy (TG, 94+/-6 to 175+/-7 mg; WT, 110+/-6 to 168+/-10 mg; both P<0.01), and expression of ANP mRNA were similar between TG and WT mice with AS. TG mice had higher incidences of premature death and critical illness due to heart failure (75% versus 23%), pleural effusion (81% versus 45%), and left atrial thrombosis (81% versus 36%, all P<0.05). A more extensive focal fibrosis was found in the hypertrophied LV of TG mice (P<0.05). These findings indicate a more severe LV dysfunction in TG mice. In sham-operated mice, LV dP/dt(max) and heart rate were markedly higher in TG than WT mice (both P<0.01). dP/dt(max) was lower in both AS groups than in sham-operated controls, and this tended to be more pronounced in TG than WT mice (-32+/-5% versus -16+/-6%, P=0.059), although dP/dt(max) remained higher in TG than WT groups (P<0.05). CONCLUSIONS: Elevated cardiac beta-adrenergic activity by beta(2)-AR overexpression leads to functional deterioration after pressure overload. |