Abstract

Angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AT(1)R) blockade attenuates left ventricular relaxation abnormality and myocardial stiffening in a model of hypertensive diastolic heart failure, but the mechanisms remain unclear. To test the hypothesis that such benefits are provided by modulation of the quantitative or qualitative changes, or both, in Ca2+ regulatory proteins and extracellular matrix. Dahl salt-sensitive rats fed a diet containing 8% sodium chloride from 7 weeks of age present pulmonary congestion as a result of diastolic dysfunction with preserved systolic function, around 20 weeks of age. In this study, animals of this model were divided into groups that received (n = 7) or did not receive (n = 6) a subdepressor dose of an AT(1)R antagonist (candesartan cilexetil) from 8 weeks of age. Long-term AT(1)R blockade prevented the development of diastolic heart failure through attenuation of left ventricular relaxation abnormality and myocardial stiffening without a reduction in blood pressure. Left ventricular relaxation abnormality was not associated with any change in the ratio of abundance of phospholamban to that of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase 2a protein, but was accompanied by a decrease in Ser16-phosphorylated phospholamban. The AT(1)R blockade inhibited this decrease. Attenuation in myocardial stiffening was associated with reduced tissue collagen content, attenuated collagen cross-linking, and suppressed gene expression of collagen type I rather than type III. AT(1)R blockade prevented abnormal relaxation at least partly through functional alterations in Ca2+-handling proteins in a hypertensive model of diastolic heart failure. It attenuated myocardial stiffening through preventing a shift in the phenotype of collagen synthesized and the accumulation of cross-linked collagen. These beneficial effects of AT(1)R blockade in diastolic heart failure are achieved without a reduction in blood pressure.

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