Nitrosative stress drives heart failure with preserved ejection fraction
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2019Metadata
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Schiattarella, Gabriele G.
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Nitrosative stress drives heart failure with preserved ejection fraction
Author
- Schiattarella, Gabriele G.;
- Altamirano, Francisco;
- Tong, Dan;
- French, Kristin M.;
- Villalobos, Elisa;
- Kim, Soo Young;
- Luo, Xiang;
- Jiang, Nan;
- May, Herman I.;
- Wang, Zhao V.;
- Hill, Theodore M.;
- Mammen, Pradeep;
- Huang, Jian;
- Lee, Dong I.;
- Hahn, Virginia;
- Sharma, Kavita;
- Kass, David A.;
- Lavandero González, Sergio;
- Gillette, Thomas G.;
- Hill, Joseph A.;
Abstract
Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) is a common syndrome with high morbidity and mortality for which there are no evidence-based therapies. Here we report that concomitant metabolic and hypertensive stress in mice—elicited by a combination of high-fat diet and inhibition of constitutive nitric oxide synthase using N ω -nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (l-NAME)—recapitulates the numerous systemic and cardiovascular features of HFpEF in humans. Expression of one of the unfolded protein response effectors, the spliced form of X-box-binding protein 1 (XBP1s), was reduced in the myocardium of our rodent model and in humans with HFpEF. Mechanistically, the decrease in XBP1s resulted from increased activity of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) and S-nitrosylation of the endonuclease inositol-requiring protein 1α (IRE1α), culminating in defective XBP1 splicing. Pharmacological or genetic suppression of iNOS, or cardiomyocyte-restricted overexpression of XBP1s, each ameliorated the HFpEF phenotype. We report that iNOS-driven dysregulation of the IRE1α–XBP1 pathway is a crucial mechanism of cardiomyocyte dysfunction in HFpEF.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/172051
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1100-z
ISSN: 14764687
00280836
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Nature . 2019 April ; 568(7752): 351–356
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