The adverse cardiopulmonary phenotype of caveolin-1 deficient mice is mediated by a dysfunctional endothelium

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Carsten Wunderlich - , Department of Internal Medicine 3 (Author)
  • Kristin Schober - , Department of Internal Medicine 3 (Author)
  • Alexander Schmeisser - , Department of Internal Medicine 3 (Author)
  • Christian Heerwagen - , Department of Internal Medicine 3 (Author)
  • Anne Kathrin Tausche - , Department of Internal Medicine III, Department of Internal Medicine and Cardiology (at Dresden Heart Centre) (Author)
  • Nadine Steinbronn - , Department of Internal Medicine 3 (Author)
  • Aljoscha Brandt - , Department of Internal Medicine 3 (Author)
  • Michael Kasper - , Institute of Anatomy (Author)
  • Carsten Schwencke - , Department of Internal Medicine 3 (Author)
  • Ruediger C. Braun-Dullaeus - , Department of Internal Medicine 3 (Author)
  • Ruth H. Strasser - , Department of Internal Medicine 3 (Author)

Abstract

Recently generated caveolin-1 deficient mice (cav-1-/-) display several physiological alterations such as severe heart failure and lung fibrosis. The molecular mechanisms how the loss of caveolin-1 (cav-1) mediates these alterations are currently under debate. A plethora of studies support a role of cav-1 as a negative regulator of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS). Accordingly, constitutive eNOS hyperactivation was observed in cav-1-/-. Given the hyperactivated eNOS enzyme we hypothesized that disturbed eNOS function is involved in the development of the cardiopulmonary pathologies in cav-1-/-. The present study argues that loss of cav-1 results in enhanced eNOS activity but not in increased vascular tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) levels (which acts as an essential eNOS cofactor) thereby causing a stoichiometric discordance between eNOS activity and BH4 sufficient to cause dysfunctional eNOS signaling. The resultant oxidative stress is largely responsible for major cardiac and pulmonary defects observed in cav-1-/-. BH4 donation to cav-1-/- led to a normalized BH4/BH2 ratio, to reduced oxidant stress, to substantial improvements of both systolic and diastolic heart function and to marked amelioration of the impaired lung phenotype. Notably, the antioxidant tetrahydroneopterin which is not essential for eNOS function showed no relevant effect. Taken together these novel findings indicate that dysfunctional eNOS is of central importance in the genesis of the cardiopulmonary phenotype of cav-1-/-. Additionally, these findings are generally of paramount importance since they underline the deleterious role of an uncoupled eNOS in cardiovascular pathology and they additionally suggest BH4 as an effective cure.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)938-947
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology
Volume44
Issue number5
Publication statusPublished - May 2008
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

PubMed 18417152

Keywords

Keywords

  • Caveolin, eNOS, Nitric oxide, Superoxide, Tetrahydrobiopterin, Tetrahydroneopterin