Abstract

Androgen has anabolic effects on cardiac myocytes and has been shown to enhance left ventricular enlargement and function. However, the physiological and patho-physiological roles of androgen in cardiac growth and cardiac stress-induced remodeling remains unclear. We aimed to clarify whether the androgen-nuclear androgen receptor (AR) system contributes to the cardiac growth and angiotensin II (Ang II)-stimulated cardiac remodeling by using systemic AR-null male mice. AR knock-out (ARKO) male mice, at 25 weeks of age, and age-matched wild-type (WT) male mice were treated with or without Ang II stimulation (2.0 mg/kg/day) for 2 weeks. ARKO mice with or without Ang II stimulation showed a significant reduction in the heart-to-body weight ratio compared with those of WT mice. In addition, echocardiographic analysis demonstrated impairments of both the concentric hypertrophic response and left ventricular function in Ang II-stimulated ARKO mice. Western blot analysis of the myocardium revealed that activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinases (ERK) 1/2 and ERK5 by Ang II stimulation were lower in ARKO mice than those of WT mice. Ang II stimulation caused more prominent cardiac fibrosis in ARKO mice than in WT mice with enhanced expression of types I and III collagen and transforming growth factor-beta1 genes and with increased Smad2 activation. These results suggest that, in male mice, the androgen-AR system participates in normal cardiac growth and modulates cardiac adaptive hypertrophy and fibrosis during the process of cardiac remodeling under hypertrophic stress.

Highlights

  • Androgen has anabolic effects on cardiac myocytes and has been shown to enhance left ventricular enlargement and function

  • Systolic blood pressure levels in both WT and AR knock-out (ARKO) mice were significantly increased by angiotensin II (Ang II) stimulation, but there was no statistical difference between the two groups (Table II)

  • There was no significant difference in heart rate between WT and ARKO mice, and Ang II stimulation did not affect heart rate in either group (Table II)

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Summary

Introduction

Androgen has anabolic effects on cardiac myocytes and has been shown to enhance left ventricular enlargement and function. Ang II stimulation caused more prominent cardiac fibrosis in ARKO mice than in WT mice with enhanced expression of types I and III collagen and transforming growth factor-␤1 genes and with increased Smad activation. These results suggest that, in male mice, the androgen-AR system participates in normal cardiac growth and modulates cardiac adaptive hypertrophy and fibrosis during the process of cardiac remodeling under hypertrophic stress. Marsh and colleagues [11] have shown that androgens produce cardiac hypertrophy by a direct, receptor-specific mechanism They revealed that androgens regulate functional expression of an L-type calcium channel in isolated rat ventricular myocytes, leading to a modulation of cardiac performance in males [12]. We obtained in vivo evidence that the androgen-AR system plays a pivotal role in normal cardiac growth and in cardiac protection against angiotensin II (Ang II)-induced cardiac fibrosis in male mice

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