Protein Fault Provides Clue to Heart Failure
An international research team studying causes of heart failure in genetically engineered mice and human tissue have found a fault in the calcium channela cellular mechanism that is essential for maintaining heart beatthat could provide a key to understanding how human hearts fail, and what to do about it.
Study participant Arnold Schwartz, PhD, DSci, director of the
The study, published in the March 14, 2007, edition on the online journal PLoS ONE, was an international collaboration also involving Roger Hullin, MD, of the Swiss Heart Center, Bern; Stefan Herzig, MD, PhD, and Jan Matthes, MD, of the University of Cologne, Germany; and
It has long been known that calcium plays a key role in controlling heart beat. To do so it passes through a protein channel, or pore, which in turn is regulated by a group of accessory proteins, a major component of which is the beta-2a regulatory protein.
What this study found, says Schwartz, who has been studying calcium channels for 25 years, is that in many types of terminal human heart failure this beta-2a protein is increased or over-expressed, and that the electrical activity in the hearts cells show a distinct pattern of single-channel activity, an indicator that the influx of calcium into the heart has also increased.
The researchers in
When the model is adapting to the increased calcium with each heartbeat, you dont see anything wrong with the heart, Schwartz explains. But we found that the beta-2a protein compensates for the protein increase by becoming under-expressed, while single-channel activity remains very normal looking.
As the animal ages, Schwartz says, the heart begins to fail, beta-2a increases and single-channel calcium activity looks almost identical to that in a failing human heart.
A second major component of the collaborative study was to genetically engineer a mouse model in which beta-2a in the heart was over-expressed from birth. When that mouse was mated with a young mouse in an adaptive phase, the transgenic offspring showed over-expressed beta-2a, and a single-channel pattern identical to that in the older mouse and the failing human heart.
This is about as close as we have gotten so far to cause and effect, says Schwartz. We need to do much more research, but its possible that somehow nature provides a mechanism in which the heart is able to adapt to certain stresses by changing the amount of a particular accessory protein, in this case beta-2a, which regulates the calcium channel.
Were still investigating how this happens, Schwartz says. But if its so, the question then is what can be done about it therapeutically.
The most exciting possibility is to lower beta-2a in a heart thats beginning to fail, because if you keep beta-2a low, the heart wont fail. This finding opens the way to new genetic approaches to heart failure.
Funding for the research done in the
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