Impaired cardiac contractility response to hemodynamic stress in S100A1 deficient mice.

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2002

Mol Cell Biol 2002 Apr;22(8):282

Impaired cardiac contractility response to hemodynamic stress in S100A1 deficient mice.

Cole, TJ;Du, XJ;Gao, XM;Heierhorst, J.;Kemp, BE;Kontgen, F;Tenis, N

Baker Medical Research Institute, Melbourne, Victoria

Service type: Knock-in mice

Abstract

Ca(2+) signaling plays a central role in cardiac contractility and adaptation to increased hemodynamic demand. We have generated mice with a targeted deletion of the S100A1 gene coding for the major cardiac isoform of the large multigenic S100 family of EF hand Ca(2+)-binding proteins. S100A1(-/-) mice have normal cardiac function under baseline conditions but have significantly reduced contraction rate and relaxation rate responses to beta-adrenergic stimulation that are associated with a reduced Ca(2+) sensitivity. In S100A1(-/-) mice, basal left-ventricular contractility deteriorated following 3-week pressure overload by thoracic aorta constriction despite a normal adaptive hypertrophy. Surprisingly, heterozygotes also had an impaired response to acute beta-adrenergic stimulation but maintained normal contractility in response to chronic pressure overload that coincided with S100A1 upregulation to wild-type levels. In contrast to other genetic models with impaired cardiac contractility, loss of S100A1 did not lead to cardiac hypertrophy or dilation in aged mice. The data demonstrate that high S100A1 protein levels are essential for the cardiac reserve and adaptation to acute and chronic hemodynamic stress in vivo.

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