Obestatin regulates cardiovascular function and promotes cardioprotection through the nitric oxide pathway.
Claudia PennaFrancesca TullioSaveria FemminòCarmine RoccaTommaso AngeloneMaria C CerraMaria Pia GalloIacopo GesmundoAlessandro FanciulliMaria Felice BrizziPasquale PagliaroGiuseppe AlloattiRiccarda GranataPublished in: Journal of cellular and molecular medicine (2017)
Patients with ischaemic heart disease or chronic heart failure show altered levels of obestatin, suggesting a role for this peptide in human heart function. We have previously demonstrated that GH secretagogues and the ghrelin gene-derived peptides, including obestatin, exert cardiovascular effects by modulating cardiac inotropism and vascular tone, and reducing cell death and contractile dysfunction in hearts subjected to ischaemia/reperfusion (I/R), through the Akt/nitric oxide (NO) pathway. However, the mechanisms underlying the cardiac actions of obestatin remain largely unknown. Thus, we suggested that obestatin-induced activation of PI3K/Akt/NO and PKG signalling is implicated in protection of the myocardium when challenged by adrenergic, endothelinergic or I/R stress. We show that obestatin exerts an inhibitory tone on the performance of rat papillary muscle in both basal conditions and under β-adrenergic overstimulation, through endothelial-dependent NO/cGMP/PKG signalling. This pathway was also involved in the vasodilator effect of the peptide, used both alone and under stress induced by endothelin-1. Moreover, when infused during early reperfusion, obestatin reduced infarct size in isolated I/R rat hearts, through an NO/PKG pathway, comprising ROS/PKC signalling, and converging on mitochondrial ATP-sensitive potassium [mitoK(ATP)] channels. Overall, our results suggest that obestatin regulates cardiovascular function in stress conditions and induces cardioprotection by mechanisms dependent on activation of an NO/soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC)/PKG pathway. In fact, obestatin counteracts exaggerated β-adrenergic and endothelin-1 activity, relevant factors in heart failure, suggesting multiple positive effects of the peptide, including the lowering of cardiac afterload, thus representing a potential candidate in pharmacological post-conditioning.
Keyphrases
- nitric oxide
- heart failure
- cell death
- signaling pathway
- pi k akt
- oxidative stress
- left ventricular
- acute myocardial infarction
- endothelial cells
- cell proliferation
- skeletal muscle
- gene expression
- stress induced
- dna methylation
- pulmonary hypertension
- diabetic rats
- heat stress
- acute ischemic stroke
- genome wide
- drug induced
- cerebral ischemia
- atrial fibrillation
- high glucose
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- smooth muscle