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Metallothionein
Inhibits Myocardial Apoptosis in Copper-Deficient Mice: Role of Atrial Natriuretic
Peptide
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Y. James Kang,
Zhan-Xiang Zhou, Huiyun Wu, Guang-Wu Wang, Jack T. Saari, and Jon B. Klein |
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Departments
of Medicine (YJK, Z-XZ, HW, G-WW, JBK), and Pharmacology and Toxicology
(YJK), University of Louisville; Jewish Hospital, Heart and Lung Institute
(YJK) and Veterans Affairs Medical Center (JBK), Louisville, Kentucky; and
the US Department of Agriculture (JTS), Agricultural Research Service, Grand
Forks Human Nutrition Research Center, Grand Forks, North Dakota |
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SUMMARY:
Dietary copper restriction causes heart hypertrophy in animal models.
Several studies have indicated that this cardiomyopathy is mediated by
oxidative stress. Metallothionein (MT), a low molecular weight and cysteine-rich
protein, functions in protecting the heart from oxidative injury. We therefore
used a cardiac-specific MT-overexpressing transgenic mouse model to test
the hypothesis that MT inhibits copper deficiency-induced heart hypertrophy.
Dams of both transgenic pups and non-transgenic littermates were fed a
copper-adequate or copper-deficient diet, starting on the fourth day post-delivery,
and the weanling mice were continued on the dams' diets until they were
killed. Heart hypertrophy developed in copper-deficient pups by the fourth
week of the combined pre- and post-weaning feeding and aggressively progressed
until the end of the experiment (6 weeks). MT overexpression did not prevent
the occurrence of heart hypertrophy, but inhibited the progression of
this cardiomyopathy, which correlated with its suppression of cardiac
lipid peroxidation. Corresponding to the progression of heart hypertrophy,
myocardial apoptosis and atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) production in
the left ventricle were detected in non-transgenic copper-deficient mice;
these effects were significantly suppressed in transgenic copper-deficient
mice. Measurement of apoptosis by TUNEL assay and Annexin V-FITC confocal
microscopy in primary cultures of cardiomyocytes revealed that ANP was
largely responsible for the myocyte apoptosis and that MT inhibited ANP-induced
apoptosis. The data clearly demonstrate that elevation of MT in the heart
inhibits oxidative injury and suppresses the progression of heart hypertrophy
in copper deficiency, although it does not block its initiation. The results
suggest that MT inhibits the transition from heart hypertrophy to failure
by suppressing apoptosis through inhibition of both cardiac ANP production
and its apoptotic effect.
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