Mice with cardiomyocyte-specific disruption of the endothelin-1 gene are resistant to hyperthyroid cardiac hypertrophy

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Abstract

Endothelin 1 (ET-1), a potent vasoconstrictor peptide expressed by endothelium, is also produced in the heart in response to a variety of stresses. It induces hypertrophy in cultured cardiac myocytes but only at concentrations far greater than those found in plasma. We tested whether ET-1 generated by cardiac myocytes in vivo is a local signal for cardiac hypertrophy. To avoid the perinatal lethality seen in systemic ET-1-null mice, we used the Cre/IoxP system to generate mice with cardiac myocyte-specific disruption of the ET-1 gene. We used the α-myosin heavy chain promoter to drive expression of Cre and were able to obtain 75% reduction in ET-1 mRNA in cardiac myocytes isolated from these mice at baseline and after stimulation, in vivo, for 24 h with tri-iodothyronine (T3). Necropsy measurements of cardiac mass indexed for body weight showed a 57% reduction in cardiac hypertrophy in response to 16 days of exogenous T3 in mice homozygous for the disrupted ET-1 allele compared to siblings with an intact ET-1 gene. Moreover, in vivo MRI showed only a 3% increase in left ventricular mass indexed for body weight in mice with the disrupted allele after 3 weeks of T3 treatment versus a 27% increase in mice with an intact ET-1 gene. A reduced hypertrophic response was confirmed by planimetry of cardiac myocytes. We conclude that ET-1, produced locally by cardiac myocytes, and acting in a paracrine/autocrine manner, is an important signal for myocardial hypertrophy that facilitates the response to thyroid hormone.

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Shohet, R. V., Kisanuki, Y. Y., Zhao, X. S., Siddiquee, Z., Franco, F., & Yanagisawa, M. (2004). Mice with cardiomyocyte-specific disruption of the endothelin-1 gene are resistant to hyperthyroid cardiac hypertrophy. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 101(7), 2088–2093. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0307159101

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