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Neuronal cholinergic signaling constrains norepinephrine activity in the heart.

Diogo A GuimarãesNayara S S AquinoCibele Rocha-ResendeItamar C G JesusMário Morais SilvaSérgio A ScalzoRoberta Cristelli FonsecaMarina de Toledo DurandVanessa PereiraGeisa C S V TeziniAndré OliveiraVania F PradoIvanita StefanonHelio Cesar SalgadoMarco Antônio Máximo PradoRaphael Escorsim SzawkaSilvia Guatimosim
Published in: American journal of physiology. Cell physiology (2022)
It is well known that cholinergic hypofunction contributes to cardiac pathology, yet, the mechanisms involved remain unclear. Our previous study has shown that genetically engineered model of cholinergic deficit, the vesicular acetylcholine transporter knockdown homozygous (VAChT KD HOM ) mice, exhibit pathological cardiac remodeling and a gradual increase in cardiac mass with aging. Given that an increase in cardiac mass is often caused by adrenergic hyperactivity, we hypothesized that VAChT KD HOM mice might have an increase in cardiac norepinephrine (NE) levels. We thus investigated the temporal changes in NE content in the heart from 3-, 6-, and 12-mo-old VAChT mutants. Interestingly, mice with cholinergic hypofunction showed a gradual elevation in cardiac NE content, which was already increased at 6 mo of age. Consistent with this finding, 6-mo-old VAChT KD HOM mice showed enhanced sympathetic activity and a greater abundance of tyrosine hydroxylase positive sympathetic nerves in the heart. VAChT mutants exhibited an increase in peak calcium transient, and mitochondrial oxidative stress in cardiomyocytes along with enhanced G protein-coupled receptor kinase 5 (GRK5) and nuclear factor of activated T-cells (NFAT) staining in the heart. These are known targets of adrenergic signaling in the cell. Moreover, vagotomized-mice displayed an increase in cardiac NE content confirming the data obtained in VAChT KD HOM mice. Establishing a causal relationship between acetylcholine and NE, VAChT KD HOM mice treated with pyridostigmine, a cholinesterase inhibitor, showed reduced cardiac NE content, rescuing the phenotype. Our findings unveil a yet unrecognized role of cholinergic signaling as a modulator of cardiac NE, providing novel insights into the mechanisms that drive autonomic imbalance.
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