Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (heart disease)
34,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The exogenous administration of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4), an essential cofactor of nitric oxide synthase (NOS), has been shown to reduce left ventricular hypertrophy, fibrosis, and cardiac dysfunction in mice with pre-established heart disease induced by pressure-overload. In this setting, BH4 re-coupled endothelial NOS (eNOS), with subsequent reduction of NOS-dependent oxidative stress and reversal of maladaptive remodeling. However, recent studies suggest the effective BH4 dosing may be narrower than previously thought, potentially due to its oxidation upon oral consumption. Accordingly, we assessed the dose response of daily oral synthetic sapropterin dihydrochloride (6-R-l-erythro-5,6,7,8-tetrahydrobiopterin, 6R-BH4) on pre-established pressure-overload cardiac disease. Mice (n=64) were administered 0-400mg/kg/d BH4 by ingesting small pre-made pellets (consumed over 15-30 min). In a dose range of 36-200mg/kg/d, 6R-BH4 suppressed cardiac chamber remodeling, hypertrophy, fibrosis, and oxidative stress with pressure-overload. However, at both lower and higher doses, BH4 had less or no ameliorative effects. The effective doses correlated with a higher myocardial BH4/BH2 ratio. However, BH2 rose linearly with dose, and at the 400mg/kg/d, this lowered the BH4/BH2 ratio back toward control. These results expose a potential limitation for the clinical use of BH4, as variability of cellular redox and perhaps heart disease could produce a variable therapeutic window among individuals. This article is part of a special issue entitled ''Key Signaling Molecules in Hypertrophy and Heart Failure.''
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PMID:Bi-modal dose-dependent cardiac response to tetrahydrobiopterin in pressure-overload induced hypertrophy and heart failure. 2164 17

Background Reduced oxygen delivery in congenital heart disease causes delayed brain maturation and white matter abnormalities in utero. No treatment currently exists. Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) is a cofactor for neuronal nitric oxide synthase. BH4 availability is reduced upon NOS activation, such as during hypoxic conditions, and leads to toxin production. We hypothesize that BH4 levels are depleted in the hypoxic brain and that BH4 replacement therapy mitigates the toxic effects of hypoxia on white matter. Methods and Results Transgenic mice were used to visualize oligodendrocytes. Hypoxia was introduced during a period of white matter development equivalent to the human third trimester. BH4 was administered during hypoxia. BH4 levels were depleted in the hypoxic brain by direct quantification (n=7-12). The proliferation (n=3-6), apoptosis (n=3-6), and developmental stage (n=5-8) of oligodendrocytes were determined immunohistologically. Total oligodendrocytes increased after hypoxia, consistent with hypoxia-induced proliferation seen previously; however, mature oligodendrocytes were less prevalent in hypoxia, and there was accumulation of immature oligodendrocytes. BH4 treatment improved the mature oligodendrocyte number such that it did not differ from normoxia, and accumulation of immature oligodendrocytes was not observed. These results persisted beyond the initial period of hypoxia (n=3-4). Apoptosis increased with hypoxia but decreased with BH4 treatment to normoxic levels. White matter myelin levels decreased following hypoxia by western blot. BH4 treatment normalized myelination (n=6-10). Hypoxia worsened sensory-motor coordination on balance beam tasks, and BH4 therapy normalized performance (n=5-9). Conclusions Suboptimal BH4 levels influence hypoxic white matter abnormalities. Repurposing BH4 for use during fetal brain development may limit white matter dysmaturation in congenital heart disease.
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PMID:Treatment With Tetrahydrobiopterin Improves White Matter Maturation in a Mouse Model for Prenatal Hypoxia in Congenital Heart Disease. 3133 Dec 24