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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (heart failure)
72,216 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) released acutely in large amounts have been traditionally implicated in the cell death associated with myocardial infarction or reperfusion injury. These ROS can be released from the cardiac myocyte mitochondria, xanthine oxidase, and the phagocytic nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NAD(P)H) oxidase. Interestingly, the chronic release of ROS has been recently linked to the development of left ventricular hypertrophy and heart failure progression. The chronic release of ROS appears to derive from the nonphagocytic NAD(P)H oxidase and mitochondria. Experimental data are accumulating suggesting that the release of ROS is required for the normal, physiologic activity of cardiac cells, but abnormal activation of the nonphagocytic NAD(P)H oxidase in response to neurohormones (angiotensin II, norepinephrine, tumor necrosis factor-a) has been shown to contribute to cardiac myocyte hypertrophy. Furthermore, the fibrosis, collagen deposition, and metalloproteinase activation involved in the remodeling of the failing myocardium are dependent on ROS released during the phenotypic transformation of fibroblasts to myofibroblasts associated with progression of end-stage heart failure. Future studies are necessary to identify the sources, mechanisms of activation of NAD(P)H oxidases, and downstream signaling targets implicated in the progression of chronic heart failure.
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PMID:Reactive oxygen species, mitochondria, and NAD(P)H oxidases in the development and progression of heart failure. 1204 81

Reactive oxygen species have an important pathogenic role in organ damage. We investigated the role of oxidative stress via nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NAD[P]H) oxidase in the kidney of the Dahl salt-sensitive (DS) rats with heart failure (DSHF). Eleven-week-old DS rats fed an 8%-NaCl diet received either vehicle or imidapril (1 mg/kg per day) for 7 weeks. The renal expression of the NAD(P)H oxidase p47phox and endothelial NO synthase were evaluated. In DSHF rats, associated with increased renal angiotensin II, mRNA and protein expression of NAD(P)H oxidase p47phox were enhanced with an increase in renal lipid peroxidation production (0.33+/-0.03 versus 0.22+/-0.01 nmol/mg protein, P<0.05) and urinary excretion of hydrogen peroxide (26.9+/-6.6 versus 9.5+/-2.1 U/mg creatinine, P<0.01) compared with levels in Dahl salt-resistant rats. The endothelial NO synthase expression was decreased in the kidney. Treatment with imidapril reduced renal angiotensin II and NAD(P)H oxidase expression and the oxidative products (kidney lipid peroxidation product: 0.16+/-0.02, P<0.001; urinary hydrogen peroxide: 3.1+/-0.2, P<0.01 versus DSHF rats). Imidapril significantly decreased albuminuria and reduced glomerulosclerosis without changes in the blood pressure. In conclusion, DSHF rats showed increased oxidative stress in the kidney via NAD(P)H oxidase. Blockade of local angiotensin II with subpressor dose of imidapril inhibited NAD(P)H oxidase and prevented renal damage.
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PMID:Angiotensin II and oxidative stress in Dahl Salt-sensitive rat with heart failure. 1246 66

The first part of this report on the Australian Health and Medical Research Congress, held November 25-29, 2002, in Melbourne, Australia, considers some of the symposia and three plenary lectures: Neurosteroids: Nature's Valium, G-Protein-Coupled Receptors and the Mike Rand Memorial Lecture. In the new era in relaxin research symposium, we learned that relaxin is a general antifibrotic agent rather than just a hormone of pregnancy. The drugs discussed in the drug discovery symposium included drugs from natural products, allosteric modulators, antibodies to cytokines and AM-336, an N-type Ca(2+) channel blocker. In the matrix proteases symposium, we learned of the importance of these enzymes in bone, endometrial remodeling and cardiovascular disease. The emphasis of the cytokine antagonist symposium was the involvement of cytokines in rheumatoid arthritis and how these effects could be inhibited with cytokine antagonists. The second part of this report is on the cardiovascular components of the meeting. One of the major strengths of Australian research is the cardiovascular area. Thus, it was not surprising that there were three major symposia with a cardiovascular theme this congress. Although the clinical trials of the NHE1 inhibitors in ischemia and reperfusion have been disappointing to date, evidence was presented in the sodium-hydrogen exchanger symposium that these agents might be beneficial in hypertrophy and heart failure. The discussion in the vessel wall biology in diabetes symposium ranged from molecular aspects to clinical trials. In this, and the NAD(P)H oxidases symposium, many new potential drug targets were discussed. The plenary lecture of the High Blood Pressure Research Council concerned the pathophysiology and management of obesity hypertension, and included a discussion of the drugs for weight reduction.
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PMID:Health and medical research down under in 2002. 1294 54

There is substantial evidence that oxidative stress participates in the pathophysiology of cardiovascular disease. Biochemical, molecular and pharmacological studies further implicate xanthine oxidoreductase (XOR) as a source of reactive oxygen species in the cardiovascular system. XOR is a member of the molybdoenzyme family and is best known for its catalytic role in purine degradation, metabolizing hypoxanthine and xanthine to uric acid with concomitant generation of superoxide. Gene expression of XOR is regulated by oxygen tension, cytokines and glucocorticoids. XOR requires molybdopterin, iron-sulphur centres, and FAD as cofactors and has two interconvertible forms, xanthine oxidase and xanthine dehydrogenase, which transfer electrons from xanthine to oxygen and NAD(+), respectively, yielding superoxide, hydrogen peroxide and NADH. Additionally, XOR can generate superoxide via NADH oxidase activity and can produce nitric oxide via nitrate and nitrite reductase activities. While a role for XOR beyond purine metabolism was first suggested in ischaemia-reperfusion injury, there is growing awareness that it also participates in endothelial dysfunction, hypertension and heart failure. Importantly, the XOR inhibitors allopurinol and oxypurinol attenuate dysfunction caused by XOR in these disease states. Attention to the broader range of XOR bioactivity in the cardiovascular system has prompted initiation of several randomised clinical outcome trials, particularly for congestive heart failure. Here we review XOR gene structure and regulation, protein structure, enzymology, tissue distribution and pathophysiological role in cardiovascular disease with an emphasis on heart failure.
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PMID:Xanthine oxidoreductase and cardiovascular disease: molecular mechanisms and pathophysiological implications. 1469 47

Energostim is a combined drug comprising a mixture of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (0.5 mg), cytochrome C (10 mg), and inosine (80 mg), representing antihypoxant and antioxidant of direct action in one ampule. After pretreatment and subsequent 3-day energostim therapy of animals with 3-day toxico-allergic myocarditis (3d-TAM), the ECG was free of any rhythm disorders and showed evidence of improved conduction, restoration of the normal form of T-wave and the position of ST segment, while the content of myofibrillar fraction of creatine phosphokinase and toxic products of disturbed metabolism (degree of endotoxemia) decreased to the upper normal level. Under the action of energostim, neither pressure nor the maximum rate of pressure buildup in the left ventricle are reduced (as they do upon 3d-TAM); neither systolic and diastolic functions are disturbed, nor their coordination (r = 0.79 between dP/dtmin and dP/dtmax, p < 0.01). The restoration of contractile activity and maximum rate of relaxation of myocardial microfibrils during 3d-TAM is accompanied by an increase in the content of adenyl nucleotides, in the ATP/ADP, ADP/AMP, NAD/NADH, and NADP/NADPH ratios, and in the cytosol phosphorylation potential. The energostim-induced improvement in the energy supply system are accompanied by restoration of the ability of sarcoplasmic reticulum to efflux Ca2+. Thus, it is demonstrated that the effect of energostim is related to its ability to actively participate in intracell metabolic processes in myocardium, abolish necrotic changes and endotoxicosis, and restore homeostasis in the systems responsible for the contraction--relaxation process (thus preventing from the development of dysfunction of the left ventricle and the heart failure).
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PMID:[Cardioprotective effect of energostim in toxic allergic myocarditis]. 1518 54

Endothelial dysfunction in the setting of cardiovascular risk factors, such as hypercholesterolaemia, hypertension, diabetes mellitus and chronic smoking, as well as in the setting of heart failure, has been shown to be at least partly dependent on the production of reactive oxygen species in endothelial and/or smooth muscle cells and the adventitia, and the subsequent decrease in vascular bioavailability of NO. Superoxide-producing enzymes involved in increased oxidative stress within vascular tissue include NAD(P)H-oxidase, xanthine oxidase and endothelial nitric oxide synthase in an uncoupled state. Recent studies indicate that endothelial dysfunction of peripheral and coronary resistance and conductance vessels represents a strong and independent risk factor for future cardiovascular events. Ways to reduce endothelial dysfunction include risk-factor modification and treatment with substances that have been shown to reduce oxidative stress and, simultaneously, to stimulate endothelial NO production, such as inhibitors of angiotensin-converting enzyme or the statins. In contrast, in conditions where increased production of reactive oxygen species, such as superoxide, in vascular tissue is established, treatment with NO, e.g. via administration of nitroglycerin, results in a rapid development of endothelial dysfunction, which may worsen the prognosis in patients with established coronary artery disease.
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PMID:Clinical aspects of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species. 1577 17

Mineralocorticoid receptors (MR) bind both mineralocorticoids and glucocorticoids with high affinity (deoxycorticosterone = corticosterone >/= aldosterone = cortisol), and are found in both Na(+) transporting epithelia (e.g. kidney, colon) and nonepithelial tissues (e.g. heart, brain). MR evolved before aldosterone synthase, consistent with their acting in nonepithelial tissues as high affinity glucocorticoid receptors, essentially always occupied by normal levels of endogenous glucocorticoids. In epithelial tissues the enzyme 11beta hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase Type 2 (11betaHSD2) allows aldosterone to selectively activate MR, by converting cortisol to cortisone and NAD to NADH. 11betaHSD2 debulks intracellular cortisol by 90%, to levels approximately 10-fold those of aldosterone, so that when the enzyme is operating most epithelial MR are occupied but not activated by cortisol. When intracellular redox state is changed-by inhibition of 11beta HSD2, generation of reactive oxygen species, or intracellular introduction of oxidised glutathione (GSSG)-cortisol changes from an MR antagonist to an MR agonist. This bivalent activity of cortisol appears to underlie the therapeutic efficacy of MR blockade in heart failure (RALES, EPHESUS) and in essential hypertension, providing a rationale for MR blockade in cardiovascular disease not characterized by elevated aldosterone levels. Its wider (patho)physiologic implications, particularly for neurobiology, remain to be explored.
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PMID:Mineralocorticoid receptors: distribution and activation. 1594 87

Heart failure is the major cause of hospitalization, morbidity and mortality worldwide. Previous experimental and clinical studies have suggested that there is an increased production of reactive oxygen species (ROS: superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, hydroxyl radical) both in animals and in patients with acute and chronic heart failure. The possible source of increased ROS in the failing myocardium include xanthine and NAD(P)H oxidoreductases, cyclooxygenase, the mitochondrial electron transport chain and activated neutrophils among many others. The excessively produced nitric oxide (NO) derived from NO synthases (NOS) has also been implicated in the pathogenesis of chronic heart failure (CHF). The combination of NO and superoxide yields peroxynitrite, a reactive oxidant, which has been shown to impair cardiac function via multiple mechanisms. Increased oxidative and nitrosative stress also activates the nuclear enzyme poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP), which importantly contributes to the pathogenesis of cardiac and endothelial dysfunction associated with myocardial infarction, chronic heart failure, diabetes, atherosclerosis, hypertension, aging and various forms of shock. Recent studies have demonstrated that pharmacological inhibition of xanthine oxidase derived superoxide formation, neutralization of peroxynitrite or inhibition of PARP provide significant benefit in various forms of cardiovascular injury. This review discusses the role of oxidative/nitrosative stress and downstream pathways in various forms of cardiomyopathy and heart failure.
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PMID:Role of oxidative-nitrosative stress and downstream pathways in various forms of cardiomyopathy and heart failure. 1602 19

Human cardiac fibroblasts are the main source of cardiac fibrosis associated with cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure. Transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) irreversibly converts fibroblasts into pathological myofibroblasts, which express smooth muscle alpha-actin (SM alpha-actin) de novo and produce extracellular matrix. We hypothesized that TGF-beta1-stimulated conversion of fibroblasts to myofibroblasts requires reactive oxygen species derived from NAD(P)H oxidases (Nox). We found that TGF-beta1 potently upregulates the contractile marker SM alpha-actin mRNA (7.5+/-0.8-fold versus control). To determine whether Nox enzymes are involved, we first performed quantitative real time polymerase chain reaction and found that Nox5 and Nox4 are abundantly expressed in cardiac fibroblasts, whereas Nox1 and Nox2 are barely detectable. On stimulation with TGF-beta1, Nox4 mRNA is dramatically upregulated by 16.2+/-0.8-fold (n=3, P<0.005), whereas Nox5 is downregulated. Small interference RNA against Nox4 downregulates Nox4 mRNA by 80+/-5%, inhibits NADPH-driven superoxide production in response to TGF-beta1 by 65+/-7%, and reduces TGF-beta1-induced expression of SM alpha-actin by 95+/-2% (n=6, P<0.05). Because activation of small mothers against decapentaplegic (Smads) 2/3 is critical for myofibroblast conversion in response to TGF-beta1, we also determined whether Nox4 affects Smad 2/3 phosphorylation. Depletion of Nox4 but not Nox5 inhibits baseline and TGF-beta1 stimulation of Smad 2/3 phosphorylation by 75+/-5% and 68+/-3%, respectively (n=7, P<0.0001). We conclude that Nox 4 mediates TGF-beta1-induced conversion of fibroblasts to myofibroblasts by regulating Smad 2/3 activation. Thus, Nox4 may play a critical role in the pathological activation of cardiac fibroblasts in cardiac fibrosis associated with human heart failure.
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PMID:NAD(P)H oxidase 4 mediates transforming growth factor-beta1-induced differentiation of cardiac fibroblasts into myofibroblasts. 1625 16

Robust activation of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1 (PARP) by oxidative stress has been implicated as a major cause of caspase-independent myocyte cell death contributing to heart failure. Here, we show that depletion of myocyte NAD levels and the subsequent reduction of Sir2alpha deacetylase activity are the sequential steps contributing to PARP-mediated myocyte cell death. In both failing hearts and cultured cardiac myocytes, the increased activity of PARP was associated with depletion of cellular NAD levels and reduced Sir2alpha deacetylase activity. Myocyte cell death induced by PARP activation was prevented by repletion of cellular NAD levels either by adding NAD directly to the culture medium or by overexpressing NAD biosynthetic enzymes. The beneficial effect of NAD repletion was seen, however, only when Sir2alpha was intact. Knocking down Sir2alpha levels by small interfering RNA eliminated this benefit, indicating that Sir2alpha is a downstream target of NAD replenishment leading to cell protection. NAD repletion also prevented loss of the transcriptional regulatory activity of the Sir2alpha catalytic core domain resulting from PARP activation. We also show that PARP activation and the concomitant reduction of Sir2alpha activity in failing hearts regulate the post-translational acetylation of p53. These data demonstrate that, in stressed cardiac myocytes, depletion of cellular NAD levels forms a link between PARP activation and reduced Sir2alpha deacetylase activity, contributing to myocyte cell death during heart failure.
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PMID:Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase-1-dependent cardiac myocyte cell death during heart failure is mediated by NAD+ depletion and reduced Sir2alpha deacetylase activity. 1620 12


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