Sex-specific cardiovascular remodeling leads to a divergent sex-dependent development of heart failure in aged hypertensive rats.
Árpád KovácsSaltanat ZhazykbayevaMelissa HerwigGábor Á FülöpTamás CsípőNikolett OláhRoua HassounHeidi BuddeHersh OsmanMustafa KaçmazKornelia JaquetDániel PrikszBéla JuhászIbrahim AkinZoltán PappWolfgang E SchmidtAndreas MüggeIbrahim El-BattrawyAttila TóthNazha HamdaniPublished in: GeroScience (2024)
Here we demonstrated divergent sex-specific cardiovascular adaptation to the over-activation of the renin-angiotensin system in the rat. Higher mortality of male TG rats in contrast to female TG rats was observed as well as reduced LV systolic function, whereas females mainly developed HFpEF. Though both sexes developed increased myocardial stiffness to which an impaired titin function contributes to a sex-specific molecular mechanism. The functional derangements of titin are due to a sex-specific divergent regulation of PKG and CaMKII systems.