| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
(Circulation. 2009;119:2789-2797.)
© 2009 American Heart Association, Inc.
Heart Failure |
From the Departments of Pathology (D.-F.D., M.V., K.G., G.M.M., L.A.L., P.S.R.), Physiology and Biophysics (L.F.S.), Genome Sciences (D.M.T., M.J.M.), Biostatistics (M.J.E.), and Comparative Medicine (W.C.L.), University of Washington, Seattle.
Correspondence to Peter S. Rabinovitch, MD, PhD, Department of Pathology, University of Washington, 1959 Pacific Ave NE, HSB-K081, Seattle, WA 98195. E-mail petersr{at}u.washington.edu
Received April 22, 2008; accepted March 13, 2009.
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Methods and Results— We used echocardiography to study cardiac function in aging cohorts of wild-type and mCAT mice. Changes found in wild-type mice recapitulate human aging: age-dependent increases in left ventricular mass index and left atrial dimension, worsening of the myocardial performance index, and a decline in diastolic function. Cardiac aging in mice is accompanied by accumulation of mitochondrial protein oxidation, increased mitochondrial DNA mutations and deletions and mitochondrial biogenesis, increased ventricular fibrosis, enlarged myocardial fiber size, decreased cardiac SERCA2 protein, and activation of the calcineurin–nuclear factor of activated T-cell pathway. All of these age-related changes were significantly attenuated in mCAT mice. Analysis of survival of 130 mice demonstrated that echocardiographic cardiac aging risk scores were significant predictors of mortality. The estimated attributable risk to mortality for these 2 parameters was 55%.
Conclusions— This study shows that cardiac aging in the mouse closely recapitulates human aging and demonstrates the critical role of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species in cardiac aging and the impact of cardiac aging on survival. These findings also support the potential application of mitochondrial antioxidants in reactive oxygen species–related cardiovascular diseases.
Key Words: aging diastole mitochondria oxidant stress survival
| Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Clinical Perspective on p 2797
Epidemiological data from the Framingham Heart Study and the Baltimore Longitudinal Study on Aging showed that in healthy populations there is an age-dependent increase in the prevalence of echocardiographic left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy, a decline in diastolic function, relatively preserved systolic function (ejection fraction) at rest, but a decline in exercise capacity (maximal ejection fraction) and an increased prevalence of atrial fibrillation.1 LV hypertrophy is well known to increase the risk of coronary heart disease, stroke, and sudden death. Diastolic heart failure, heart failure with diastolic dysfunction but preserved systolic function, plays a major role in congestive heart failure and exercise intolerance in the elderly population. Given demographic projections, heart failure is likely to become the major cause of hospital admissions and mortality in North America.2
According to the mitochondrial variant of the free radical theory of aging, reactive oxygen species (ROS) produced mainly in the mitochondria attack mitochondrial constituents, causing mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) damage and mitochondrial dysfunction, leading to further production of ROS, increases in oxidative damage to lipids and proteins, and declines in cellular and organ function that contribute to death.3 We have recently shown that although both point mutations and deletions in mtDNA accumulate with aging, mtDNA deletions are likely to drive the aging process.4 As a vital organ rich in mitochondria and high in oxygen use, the heart is especially prone to oxidative damage. Together with the fact that cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death in humans, we hypothesized that in the absence of other cardiovascular risks, cardiac aging is a predictor of mortality.
In this report, we have made use of a transgenic mouse model in which catalase is overexpressed and targeted to mitochondria (mCAT) to clearly define cardiac aging phenotypes in a murine model of aging and investigate their plausible molecular mechanisms, to investigate the impact of reductions in mitochondrial ROS on cardiac aging, and to investigate the impact of cardiac aging on all-cause mortality.
| Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Animal Longevity Cohort and Echocardiography
C57Bl6 mice in the longevity cohort were maintained as described.5 This study included a cross-sectional sample of 170 mice from this cohort, with 20 to 30 mice in each group. Mice were not subjected to any invasive experimentation other than echocardiography. Echocardiography was performed with an Acuson CV-70 (Siemens Medical Systems, Malvern, Pa) using standard imaging planes: M-mode, conventional, and tissue Doppler imaging. All protocols were approved by the University of Washington Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee.
Biochemical and Molecular Analysis
Gene expression, mtDNA copy number, and mutation frequency assays were performed with quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Mitochondrial protein carbonyl and calcineurin activity assays were determined with commercial kits. Measurement of cardiac angiotensins was performed with a tandem quadrupole mass spectrometry coupled to high-performance liquid chromatography. For study of calcium transients, cardiomyocytes were isolated by an enzymatic method, loaded with Fluo-4, and electrically stimulated at 1 Hz. Calcium transient fluorescence was collected with an IonOptix system (IonOptix, Milton, Mass).6
Statistics and Survival Analysis
Continuous variables with normal distribution are presented as mean±SEM. Those significantly skewed are presented as box plots (median, 25%, 75%) with an x within the box to indicate the mean. Standard t tests, ANOVA, and linear regression were applied as appropriate to detect the statistical differences between genotypes or age groups. Probability values are shown uncorrected for multiple testing. To be more conservative, a Bonferroni correction (n=2) can be applied to t test comparisons between young wild-type (WT) and old WT and between old WT and old mCAT groups, after which P<0.025 would be considered significant. To investigate the effect of cardiac aging on survival, we chose variables representing structure (LV mass index [LVMI]) and function (myocardial performance index [MPI]) a priori to create a cardiac aging risk score. Univariate Cox regression was used to verify a strong association between these variables and mortality. We then included both age-adjusted functional decline (MPI) and structural changes (LVMI) in a multivariate analysis to generate the semiparametric maximum likelihood estimate of the best-fitting linear combination of MPI and LVMI score in predicting subsequent mortality (β2 MPI+β3 LVMI in model 1 in the Table). We define this linear combination as the cardiac aging risk score; Kaplan–Meier curves stratified on the risk score tertiles are used to illustrate the differences in risk as the score increases. Log-rank test probability values serve as descriptive statistics for the strength of the differences in survival between tertiles. To approximate the attributable risk fraction of cardiac aging on mortality, we calculated the difference between the incidence of the all-cause mortality rate of mice with risk scores in the highest tertile and the incidence in those with scores in the middle and lowest tertiles.7
|
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Echocardiography was performed in 90 mCAT and 80 WT littermate mice across a wide range of ages in a mouse longevity cohort. Despite the absence of cardiovascular risk factors, we found significant age-dependent linear trends for all parameters (P<0.001 for all except fractional shortening, P=0.005). LVMI (Figure 1A) was 76% higher in the oldest group compared with the young adult group. Left atrial dimension was significantly increased by 35% with age (Figure 1B). Systolic function measured by fractional shortening showed a 12% decline from young adult to the oldest group (Figure 1C). Tissue Doppler imaging revealed an age-dependent decline in Ea/Aa, from 1.69±0.3 in young adult to 0.95±0.4 in the oldest (Figure 1D). The prevalence of diastolic dysfunction, defined as Ea/Aa <1,9 was dramatically increased to 55% in the oldest age group (Figure 1E). The MPI was significantly increased (worsened) with age (Figure 1F), consistent with the age-related declines in systolic and diastolic function. These abnormalities closely mimic the age-related echocardiographic changes previously reported in healthy human populations.1
|
The age-related changes in all of the above echocardiographic findings were significantly delayed and attenuated in age-matched mCAT littermates. In the oldest group, mCAT significantly reduced the age-related increase in LVMI by 39%, the percent of mice with diastolic dysfunction by 69%, the MPI by 67%, and the age-related decrease in Ea/Aa by 59% (Figure 1). The genotype difference in the linear rate of change with age (the genotype-by-slope interaction) was highly significant for all outcomes (P<0.001 for all except fractional shortening, P=0.03).
To confirm the protective effects of mCAT on cardiac aging, we performed a cross-sectional study of 42 additional old WT and mCAT C57BL6 mice (age, 27 to 29 months) in which cardiac tissue harvest was also performed within 24 hours after echocardiography. The protective effects of mCAT on echocardiographic parameters were fully reproduced in this independent data set (online-only Data Supplement Table II).
Histological analysis of tissue showed that compared with young WT (4 months of age), old WT mice had significantly larger myocardial fiber width (Figure 2A and 2B) and a higher cross-sectional area with fibrosis (Figure 2C and 2D). Both cardiomyocyte hypertrophy and ventricular fibrosis were significantly attenuated in age-matched old mCAT mice. There was no genotype difference in young adults. Moreover, myocardial fiber width by image analysis was highly correlated with LVMI determined by echocardiography (R2=0.73, P<0.01; online-only Data Supplement Figure I).
|
MCAT Protects Against Mitochondrial Oxidative Damage and DNA Mutations in the Aged Heart
As an extension to our earlier findings that mCAT protected cardiac mitochondrial aconitase enzymes from oxidative damage,7 we further found that protein carbonyls, an indicator of oxidative damage, increased significantly in cardiac mitochondria with age and was significantly reduced in old mCAT mice (Figure 3C). Aging is associated with increased mtDNA mutations and deletions,4,10 as well as extensive morphological damage in mitochondria shown by electron micrographs (online-only Data Supplement Figure II). Using the newly developed random mutation capture assay, we found that cardiac mtDNA point mutation and deletion frequencies both significantly increased by
3-fold with aging.11 The mCAT genotype significantly reduced DNA point mutation and deletion frequencies to levels more comparable to those of young animals (Figure 3A and 3B). We found that mtDNA copy number increased in the aged heart (Figure 3D) and was accompanied by upregulation of transcription factors involved in mitochondrial biogenesis (Figure 3E), consistent with reports that oxidative stress induces mitochondrial biogenesis.12 Most of these changes were significantly reduced in old mCAT mice, including an attenuated increase in mtDNA copy number and reduced induction of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator-1 alpha (PGC-1
) and transcription factor A, mitochondrial (TFAM) but not nuclear respiratory factors 1 and 2 (NRF-1 and NRF-2) mRNA (Figure 3D and 3E).
|
Plausible Mechanisms of Cardiac Hypertrophy in the Aged Heart and the Effect of mCAT
To investigate the potential mechanisms of aging-associated cardiac hypertrophy, we measured the activation of calcineurin–nuclear factor of activated T-cell (NFAT) and phospho-ERK1/2 pathways, which are known to mediate pathological and compensated hypertrophy, respectively.13 Both the phosphorylation of ERK1/2 and the total ERK1/2 protein levels did not change significantly with age (data not shown). However, we found that the calcineurin-NFAT pathway was activated in cardiac aging. Activity of calcineurin, a phosphatase that activates NFAT by dephosphorylation, was found to increase significantly with age (Figure 4A). Downstream of calcineurin, NFAT3 activity was increased in aged heart as shown by stronger DNA binding activity (Figure 4B) and increased transcription of NFAT target genes, including modulatory calcineurin interacting protein-1 and atrial and brain natriuretic peptides (Figure 4C). Furthermore, we found that GATA4, a cofactor of NFAT3,14 was activated in aged heart, as shown by increased phosphorylation of GATA4 at serine 105 (Figure 4D). The age-dependent activation of calcineurin-NFAT and GATA4 was significantly reduced in old mCAT hearts (Figure 4A through 4D).
|
Plausible Mechanisms of Diastolic Dysfunction in the Aged Heart and Effect of mCAT
Several factors have been reported to cause diastolic dysfunction, including impaired myocardial relaxation resulting from decreased calcium reuptake and increased myocardial stiffness.15 Increased fibrosis in aged heart and amelioration of fibrosis in mCAT mice were described above.
Sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca ATP-ase (SERCA2) and the sodium-calcium exchanger (NCX) are key proteins in calcium reuptake that assist in myocardial relaxation during the diastolic phase. They were examined by Western blots in aged heart. Quantitative analysis revealed that SERCA2 protein decreased by 52% in aged WT heart compared with young WT heart (P<0.01). SERCA2 was much better preserved in old mCAT heart compared with old WT littermates (Figure 5A). NCX protein increased by 103% in the aged WT heart compared with the young WT heart (Figure 5B). The increase was significantly less in old mCAT hearts compared with old WT hearts. Interestingly, we found an inverse correlation between the level of NCX and SERCA2 proteins (Figure 5C). This novel observation suggests that NCX may be upregulated in the aged heart to compensate for the decline in SERCA2. Levels of total and phosphorylated phospholamban, which inhibits SERCA2 activity in its dephosphorylated form, did not change significantly with age (Figure 5E).
|
To further investigate plausible mechanisms of diastolic dysfunction in the aged heart, we analyzed the relationships of myocardial fiber width, ventricular fibrosis, and SERCA2 protein with diastolic dysfunction. Univariate analysis showed that cardiomyocyte hypertrophy and ventricular fibrosis were significantly associated with the presence of diastolic dysfunction (Figure 6A and 6B). These findings were consistent with the fact that both ventricular hypertrophy and fibrosis would increase myocardial stiffness. The level of SERCA2 protein was dramatically decreased in mice with age-related diastolic dysfunction (Figure 6C). Multivariate regression modeling showed that SERCA2 was the strongest predictor of Ea/Aa, an indicator of diastolic function (P=0.01; online-only Data Supplement Table III).
|
To further investigate the role of SERCA2 in aging, we examined [Ca2+]i transients in ventricular myocytes isolated from mouse hearts, loaded with the Ca2+ indicator dye Fluo-4, and paced at 1 Hz. Compared with young cardiomyocytes, old WT cardiomyocytes had significantly lower [Ca2+]i transient amplitude and slower rates of decay, whereas old mCAT cardiomyocytes had significantly preserved calcium transient amplitude and decay rates (Figure 6D and 6E). Stimulation with caffeine, which opens ryanodine receptors and unloads the sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium,5 showed that old WT cardiomyocytes had significantly lower sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium loads. This is consistent with the lower [Ca2+]i transient amplitude observed in old WT cardiomyocytes. Inhibition of SERCA2 with cyclopyazonic acid (5 µmol/L) completely abolished the beneficial effects of mCAT on calcium transient amplitude and rate of decay (Figure 6E and 6F), suggesting that the protective effect of mCAT in aged cardiomyocytes is mediated by better preservation of SERCA2 activity. Overall, the decline of ventricular SERCA2 thus appeared to be the most important factor associated with age-dependent cardiac diastolic dysfunction, presumably by causing impaired myocardial relaxation.
Increased Cardiac Angiotensin II in Aging
Angiotensin II (Ang II) is known to induce cardiomyocyte hypertrophy and apoptosis, increase cardiac fibrosis, and impair cardiomyocyte relaxation,16 compatible with all of the above aging-related changes. We therefore measured the cardiac Ang II octapeptide in young and old LV tissue using mass spectrometry. Cardiac Ang II concentrations increased significantly with age (Figure 5D). mCAT did not appear to reduce the age-related increase in cardiac Ang II, suggesting that the mechanism of mCAT protection is downstream of Ang II.
Cardiac Aging Phenotype as Predictors of Follow-Up Mortality
To investigate whether the cardiac aging phenotype determined by echocardiography is a predictor of follow-up mortality, we performed survival analysis of 130 old WT and mCAT mice that underwent echocardiography at midlife (age, 16 to 24 months) in the longevity cohort. Univariate Cox regression analyses verify that age, MPI, and LVMI were significant predictors of mortality (the Table). A multivariate Cox model was used to estimate the best linear combination of these variables (β2 MPI+β3 LVMI) to create a cardiac aging risk score for each mouse based on these variables. Cox regression adjusted for age at the time of echocardiography (Cox model 2) verifies that this risk score provides a biologically meaningful measure of the risk of death; mice in the highest tertile (T3) had a significantly increased hazard of all-cause mortality, with a hazard ratio of 2.88 (95% confidence interval, 1.43, 5.82; P=0.003), compared with mice in the lowest tertile of cardiac aging score (T1) (the Table and Figure 7A). As evidence for our hypothesis, we found a marked difference in the distribution of cardiac aging risk scores between mCAT and WT mice: At midlife, the proportions of mCAT mice in T1, T2, and T3 were 91%, 48%, and 24% versus 9%, 52%, and 76% for WT (
2=39.4, P<10–7). Kaplan–Meier analysis based on tertiles of cardiac risk scores calculated separately for WT and mCAT mice also stratified each of these genotypes into high- and low-mortality-risk groups (Figure 7B and 7C, respectively).
|
To study the relative contribution of cardiac aging to mortality, we estimated the incidence of all-cause mortality in mice that reached their natural end of life. The incidence of mortality in the highest tertile of cardiac aging score (T3) versus those in the lower 2 tertiles of cardiac aging score was 16.2% and 7.3%, respectively. The attributable risk fraction indicated that 55% of mortality risk was attributable to the cardiac aging risk score. This is the first such analysis of cardiac functional parameters with aging that has been reported. Thus, cardiac aging is a significant predictor of mortality in mice despite the absence of hypertension, diabetes, or hypercholesterolemia, and the cardiac aging phenotype appears to contribute to approximately half of the mortality risk in the mouse longevity cohort.
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
To investigate the signaling in age-associated cardiac hypertrophy, we examined 2 major pathways of cardiac hypertrophy, MEK1/2-ERK1/2 and calcineurin pathways, which are central regulators of compensated and pathological hypertrophy, respectively.13 Although we did not find increased expression or phosphorylation of ERK1/2 in aging, we found that the calcineurin-NFAT pathway was significantly activated in the aged heart. Calcineurin activity was increased by
4-fold in the aged heart (Figure 4A). This phosphatase activates the transcription factor NFAT. Activated NFAT translocates into nucleus, where it interacts with the transcription factor (GATA4) to initiate transcription of hypertrophic fetal genes such as atrial and brain natriuretic peptides. Electrophoretic mobility shift assay showed that NFAT DNA binding activity is increased in aged heart (Figure 4B), consistent with increased mRNA levels of atrial and brain natriuretic peptides and modulatory calcineurin interacting protein-1 (Figure 4C). Furthermore, we found an age-dependent increase in GATA4 phosphorylation at Ser105 (Figure 4D), which has been reported to enhance its activity of DNA binding and transcription activation.14 The activation of the calcineurin-NFAT pathway in age-associated cardiac hypertrophy was partially protected by mCAT, suggesting an interaction between ROS and hypertrophic signaling mediators. Although myocardial ROS has been implicated in the generation of cardiac hypertrophy and dysfunction, as shown by the antihypertrophic effect of several antioxidants,17,18 the in vivo evidence for direct links between hypertrophic mediators and ROS has been scant.19 ROS might cause oxidative and nitrative modification of signaling proteins and may thereby modulate signal transduction and transcriptional and translational regulation.20 However, further studies are needed to elucidate the exact mechanism of these interactions.
Upstream of the above signaling pathways, Ang II induces cardiomyocyte hypertrophy and apoptosis, increases cardiac fibrosis, and impairs cardiomyocyte relaxation,16 all consistent with our observed age-related changes. Inserra et al21 proposed that Ang II is a crucial mediator of cardiovascular aging. They recently showed that long-term inhibition of Ang II reduces cardiac pathology and prolongs rat survival.22 Consistent with this, we found that cardiac Ang II concentrations increased significantly with age. Cardiac Ang II levels in old mCAT mice were similar to those in old WT mice despite mCAT protection against cardiac aging, suggesting that mCAT acts downstream of Ang II. Ang II is known to promote superoxide generation through NADPH oxidase, to uncouple endothelial nitric oxide synthase, and to stimulate mitochondrial H2O2 production in vascular endothelial cells in vitro.23 Although blocking Ang II signaling provides survival benefit in patients with heart disease, the efficacy of such drugs for retarding intrinsic cardiac aging remains unknown.
Diastolic dysfunction is well documented in human cardiac aging. Impaired myocardial relaxation caused by functional decline in calcium handling proteins and increased myocardial stiffness related to cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis are common causes of diastolic dysfunction. Among these, the decline in SERCA2 protein is the strongest predictor of diastolic dysfunction in aged mice (online-only Data Supplement Table III). We and others have found that old WT cardiomyocytes have a lower amplitude and prolonged decay rate of calcium transients,24 and we have shown that old mCAT cardiomyocytes have calcium transient profiles more comparable to young cardiomyocytes (Figure 6E). Significantly lower sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium loads in old WT cardiomyocytes (shown by caffeine stimulation; Figure 6D) are best explained by a chronic reduction in SERCA2 protein levels in old hearts because dephosphorylated phospholamban did not change significantly with age (Figure 5E) and the beneficial effect of mCAT was completely abolished when SERCA2 was inhibited by cyclopyazonic acid (Figure 6E). Our data also show that NCX is upregulated in aged heart when SERCA2 is decreased. Such declines in SERCA2 and increases in NCX expression have previously been reported in cardiac aging in response to Ang II and in heart failure.25–27 Ren et al28 reported that overexpression of catalase in cardiomyocytes attenuated aging-induced cardiomyocyte relaxation dysfunction by increasing NCX rather than preserving SERCA2. In contrast, mCAT preserves SERCA2 in old mice, and upregulation of NCX is less apparent.
Although mice are the best-studied experimental model of mammalian aging, little evidence has directly linked the senescence of vital organs with survival. Echocardiographic data of our mouse longevity cohort suggested that both cardiac hypertrophy (increased LVMI) and functional decline (increased MPI) are significant predictors of mortality. We generated the cardiac aging risk score for each mouse in the cohort, estimated by the linear regression model of LVMI and MPI (Cox model 1, the Table), and showed that the cardiac aging risk score is an independent predictor of mortality. Estimation by an epidemiological approach suggested that approximately half of the natural deaths in the cohort were attributable to cardiac aging. Study of the end-of-life pathology of this longevity cohort has indicated that cardiac pathology was a contributing cause of death in about half of the C57BL6 mice,29 consistent with the estimated attributable risk fraction for cardiac aging by echocardiography, suggesting that cardioprotection likely contributes to the lifespan extension previously observed in mCAT mice.5 Such demonstration of improved organ function during aging may be even more relevant to human health than observations of extended longevity,30 and this report shows that the murine model of cardiac aging is well suited for this approach.
| Conclusions |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health grants P30 AG013280 and P01 AG001751.
Disclosures
None.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
2. Murphy SW. Diastolic dysfunction. Curr Treat Options Cardiovasc Med. 2004; 6: 61–68.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
3. Balaban RS, Nemoto S, Finkel T. Mitochondria, oxidants, and aging. Cell. 2005; 120: 483–495.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
4. Vermulst M, Bielas JH, Kujoth GC, Ladiges WC, Rabinovitch PS, Prolla TA, Loeb LA. Mitochondrial point mutations do not limit the natural lifespan of mice. Nat Genet. 2007; 39: 540–543.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
5. Schriner SE, Linford NJ, Martin GM, Treuting P, Ogburn CE, Emond M, Coskun PE, Ladiges W, Wolf N, Van Remmen H, Wallace DC, Rabinovitch PS. Extension of murine life span by overexpression of catalase targeted to mitochondria. Science. 2005; 308: 1909–1911.
6. Dilly KW, Rossow CF, Votaw VS, Meabon JS, Cabarrus JL, Santana LF. Mechanisms underlying variations in excitation-contraction coupling across the mouse left ventricular free wall. J Physiol. 2006; 572: 227–241.
7. Etches V, Frank J, Di Ruggiero E, Manuel D. Measuring population health: a review of indicators. Annu Rev Public Health. 2006; 27: 29–55.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
8. Zheng F, Plati AR, Potier M, Schulman Y, Berho M, Banerjee A, Leclercq B, Zisman A, Striker LJ, Striker GE. Resistance to glomerulosclerosis in B6 mice disappears after menopause. Am J Pathol. 2003; 162: 1339–1348.
9. Khouri SJ, Maly GT, Suh DD, Walsh TE. A practical approach to the echocardiographic evaluation of diastolic function. J Am Soc Echocardiogr. 2004; 17: 290–297.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
10. Vermulst M, Wanagat J, Kujoth GC, Bielas JH, Rabinovitch PS, Prolla TA, Loeb LA. DNA deletions and clonal mutations drive premature aging in mitochondrial mutator mice. Nat Genet. 2008; 40: 392–394.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
11. Bielas JH, Loeb LA. Quantification of random genomic mutations. Nat Methods. 2005; 2: 285–290.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
12. St-Pierre J, Drori S, Uldry M, Silvaggi JM, Rhee J, Jager S, Handschin C, Zheng K, Lin J, Yang W, Simon DK, Bachoo R, Spiegelman BM. Suppression of reactive oxygen species and neurodegeneration by the PGC-1 transcriptional coactivators. Cell. 2006; 127: 397–408.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
13. Heineke J, Molkentin JD. Regulation of cardiac hypertrophy by intracellular signalling pathways. Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol. 2006; 7: 589–600.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
14. Liang Q, Wiese RJ, Bueno OF, Dai YS, Markham BE, Molkentin JD. The transcription factor GATA4 is activated by extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1- and 2-mediated phosphorylation of serine 105 in cardiomyocytes. Mol Cell Biol. 2001; 21: 7460–7469.
15. Zile MR, Brutsaert DL. New concepts in diastolic dysfunction and diastolic heart failure: Part II: causal mechanisms and treatment. Circulation. 2002; 105: 1503–1508.
16. Rosenkranz S. TGF-beta1 and angiotensin networking in cardiac remodeling. Cardiovasc Res. 2004; 63: 423–432.
17. Date MO, Morita T, Yamashita N, Nishida K, Yamaguchi O, Higuchi Y, Hirotani S, Matsumura Y, Hori M, Tada M, Otsu K. The antioxidant N-2-mercaptopropionyl glycine attenuates left ventricular hypertrophy in in vivo murine pressure-overload model. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2002; 39: 907–912.
18. Matsushima S, Ide T, Yamato M, Matsusaka H, Hattori F, Ikeuchi M, Kubota T, Sunagawa K, Hasegawa Y, Kurihara T, Oikawa S, Kinugawa S, Tsutsui H. Overexpression of mitochondrial peroxiredoxin-3 prevents left ventricular remodeling and failure after myocardial infarction in mice. Circulation. 2006; 113: 1779–1786.
19. McKinsey TA, Kass DA. Small-molecule therapies for cardiac hypertrophy: moving beneath the cell surface. Nat Rev Drug Discov. 2007; 6: 617–635.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
20. Liu H, Colavitti R, Rovira II, Finkel T. Redox-dependent transcriptional regulation. Circ Res. 2005; 97: 967–974.
21. Inserra F, Romano L, Ercole L, de Cavanagh EM, Ferder L. Cardiovascular changes by long-term inhibition of the renin-angiotensin system in aging. Hypertension. 1995; 25: 437–442.
22. Basso N, Cini R, Pietrelli A, Ferder L, Terragno NA, Inserra F. Protective effect of long-term angiotensin II inhibition. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2007; 293: H1351–H1358.
23. Doughan AK, Harrison DG, Dikalov SI. Molecular mechanisms of angiotensin II mediated mitochondrial dysfunction: linking mitochondrial oxidative damage and vascular endothelial dysfunction. Circ Res. 2008; 102: 488–496.
24. Lim CC, Apstein CS, Colucci WS, Liao R. Impaired cell shortening and relengthening with increased pacing frequency are intrinsic to the senescent mouse cardiomyocyte. J Mol Cell Cardiol. 2000; 32: 2075–2082.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
25. Lakatta EG. Arterial and cardiac aging: major shareholders in cardiovascular disease enterprises, part III: cellular and molecular clues to heart and arterial aging. Circulation. 2003; 107: 490–497.
26. Houser SR, Piacentino V 3rd, Weisser J. Abnormalities of calcium cycling in the hypertrophied and failing heart. J Mol Cell Cardiol. 2000; 32: 1595–1607.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
27. Domenighetti AA, Wang Q, Egger M, Richards SM, Pedrazzini T, Delbridge LM. Angiotensin II-mediated phenotypic cardiomyocyte remodeling leads to age-dependent cardiac dysfunction and failure. Hypertension. 2005; 46: 426–432.
28. Ren J, Li Q, Wu S, Li SY, Babcock SA. Cardiac overexpression of antioxidant catalase attenuates aging-induced cardiomyocyte relaxation dysfunction. Mech Ageing Dev. 2007; 128: 276–285.[CrossRef][Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
29. Treuting PM, Linford NJ, Knoblaugh SE, Emond MJ, Morton JF, Martin GM, Rabinovitch PS, Ladiges WC. Reduction of age-associated pathology in old mice by overexpression of catalase in mitochondria. J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2008; 63: 813–822.[Medline] [Order article via Infotrieve]
30. Butler RN, Miller RA, Perry D, Carnes BA, Williams TF, Cassel C, Brody J, Bernard MA, Partridge L, Kirkwood T, Martin GM, Olshansky SJ. New model of health promotion and disease prevention for the 21st century. BMJ. 2008; 337: a399.
| Footnotes |
|---|
Related Article:
Circulation 2009 119: 2749-2751.
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
S. P. Singh, M. Niemczyk, D. Saini, V. Sadovov, L. Zimniak, and P. Zimniak Disruption of the mGsta4 Gene Increases Life Span of C57BL Mice J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci, October 30, 2009; (2009) glp165v1. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
Y. Inuzuka, J. Okuda, T. Kawashima, T. Kato, S. Niizuma, Y. Tamaki, Y. Iwanaga, Y. Yoshida, R. Kosugi, K. Watanabe-Maeda, et al. Suppression of Phosphoinositide 3-Kinase Prevents Cardiac Aging in Mice Circulation, October 27, 2009; 120(17): 1695 - 1703. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
M. Swinnen, D. Vanhoutte, G. C. Van Almen, N. Hamdani, M. W.M. Schellings, J. D'hooge, J. Van der Velden, M. S. Weaver, E. H. Sage, P. Bornstein, et al. Absence of Thrombospondin-2 Causes Age-Related Dilated Cardiomyopathy Circulation, October 20, 2009; 120(16): 1585 - 1597. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Circulation Home | Subscriptions | Archives | Feedback | Authors | Help | AHA Journals Home | Search Copyright © 2009 American Heart Association, Inc. All rights reserved. Unauthorized use prohibited. |