Ionizing radiation regulates cardiac Ca handling via increased ROS and activated CaMKII

2013 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Ionizing radiation regulates cardiac Ca handling via increased ROS and activated CaMKII​
Sag, C. M.; Wolff, H. A.; Neumann, K.; Opiela, M.-K.; Zhang, J.; Steuer, F. & Sowa, T. et al.​ (2013) 
Basic Research in Cardiology108(6) art. 385​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00395-013-0385-6 

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Authors
Sag, Can Martin; Wolff, Hendrik Andreas; Neumann, Kay; Opiela, Marie-Kristin; Zhang, J.; Steuer, Felicia; Sowa, Thomas; Gupta, Shamindra; Schirmer, Markus; Huenlich, Mark; Rave-Fraenk, Margret; Hess, Clemens Friedrich; Anderson, Mark E.; Shah, Ajay M.; Christiansen, Hans; Maier, Lars S. 
Abstract
Ionizing radiation (IR) is an integral part of modern multimodal anti-cancer therapies. IR involves the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in targeted tissues. This is associated with subsequent cardiac dysfunction when applied during chest radiotherapy. We hypothesized that IR (i.e., ROS)-dependently impaired cardiac myocytes' Ca handling might contribute to IR-dependent cardiocellular dysfunction. Isolated ventricular mouse myocytes and the mediastinal area of anaesthetized mice (that included the heart) were exposed to graded doses of irradiation (sham 4 and 20 Gy) and investigated acutely (after similar to 1 h) as well as chronically (after similar to 1 week). IR induced a dose-dependent effect on myocytes' systolic function with acutely increased, but chronically decreased Ca transient amplitudes, which was associated with an acutely unaltered but chronically decreased sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca load. Likewise, in vivo echocardiography of anaesthetized mice revealed acutely enhanced left ventricular contractility (strain analysis) that declined after 1 week. Irradiated myocytes showed persistently increased diastolic SR Ca leakage, which was acutely compensated by an increase in SR Ca reuptake. This was reversed in the chronic setting in the face of slowed relaxation kinetics. As underlying cause, acutely increased ROS levels were identified to activate Ca/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII). Accordingly, CaMKII-, but not PKA-dependent phosphorylation sites of the SR Ca release channels (RyR2, at Ser-2814) and phospholamban (at Thr-17) were found to be hyperphosphorylated following IR. Conversely, ROS-scavenging as well as CaMKII-inhibition significantly attenuated CaMKII-activation, disturbed Ca handling, and subsequent cellular dysfunction upon irradiation. Targeted cardiac irradiation induces a biphasic effect on cardiac myocytes Ca handling that is associated with chronic cardiocellular dysfunction. This appears to be mediated by increased oxidative stress and persistently activated CaMKII. Our findings suggest impaired cardiac myocytes Ca handling as a so far unknown mediator of IR-dependent cardiac damage that might be of relevance for radiation-induced cardiac dysfunction.
Issue Date
2013
Journal
Basic Research in Cardiology 
Project
SFB 1002: Modulatorische Einheiten bei Herzinsuffizienz 
SFB 1002 | A03: Bedeutung CaMKII-abhängiger Mechanismen für die Arrhythmogenese bei Herzinsuffizienz 
Working Group
RG L. Maier (Experimentelle Kardiologie) 
ISSN
0300-8428

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