Abstract

BackgroundProtein kinase G (PKG) Iα is the end-effector kinase that mediates nitric oxide (NO)-dependent and oxidant-dependent vasorelaxation to maintain blood pressure during health. A hallmark of cardiovascular disease is attenuated NO production, which in part is caused by NO Synthase (NOS) uncoupling, which in turn increases oxidative stress because of superoxide generation. NOS uncoupling promotes PKG Iα oxidation to the interprotein disulfide state, likely mediated by superoxide-derived hydrogen peroxide, and because the NO-cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) pathway otherwise negatively regulates oxidation of the kinase to its active disulfide dimeric state. Diet-induced obesity is associated with NOS uncoupling, which may in part contribute to the associated cardiovascular dysfunction due to exacerbated PKG Iα disulfide oxidation to the disulfide state. This is a rational hypothesis because PKG Iα oxidation is known to significantly contribute to heart failure that arises from chronic myocardial oxidative stress. Methods and resultsBovine arterial endothelial cells (BAECs) or smooth muscle cells (SMCs) were exposed to drugs that uncouple NOS. These included 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)−1-nitrosourea (BCNU) which promotes its S-glutathiolation, 4-diamino-6-hydroxy-pyrimidine (DAHP) which inhibits guanosine-5′-triphosphate-cyclohydrolase 2 to prevent BH4 synthesis or methotrexate (MTX) which inhibits the regeneration of BH4 from BH2 by dihydrofolate reductase. While all the drugs mentioned above induced robust PKG Iα disulfide dimerization in cells, exposure of BAECs to NOS inhibitor L-NMMA did not. Increased PKG Iα disulfide formation occurred in hearts and aortae from mice treated in vivo with DAHP (10mM in a drinking water for 3 weeks). Redox-dead C42S PKG Iα knock-in (KI) mice developed less pronounced cardiac posterior wall hypertrophy and did not develop cardiac dysfunction, assessed by echocardiography, compared to the wild-type (WT) mice after chronic DAHP treatment. WT or KI mice were then subjected to a diet-induced obesity protocol by feeding them with a high fat Western-type diet (RM 60% AFE) for 27 weeks, which increased body mass, adiposity, plasma leptin, resistin and glucagon levels comparably in each genotype. Obesity-induced hypertension, assessed by radiotelemetry, was mild and transient in the WT, while the basally hypertensive KI mice were resistant to further increases in blood pressure following high fat feeding. Although the obesogenic diet caused mild cardiac dysfunction in the WT but not the KI mice, gross changes in myocardial structure monitored by echocardiography were not apparent in either genotype. The level of cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) was decreased in the aortae of WT and KI mice following high fat feeding. PKG Iα oxidation was not evident in the hearts of WT mice fed a high fat diet. ConclusionsDespite robust evidence for PKG Iα oxidation during NOS uncoupling in cell models, it is unlikely that PKG Iα oxidation occurs to a significant extent in vivo during diet-induced obesity and so is unlikely to mediate the associated cardiovascular dysfunction.

Highlights

  • A global obesity pandemic, resulting at least in part from altered dietary practices and a decline in physical activity, continues to emerge

  • In a separate set of experiments C57BL/6 mice were implanted with radiotelemetry transmitters and blood pressure was measured for three days to establish the baseline, after which DAHP was administered in the drinking water for a further 3 weeks

  • The effect of NO Synthase (NOS) uncoupling on Protein kinase G (PKG) Iα disulfide dimerization was tested in cell culture studies

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Summary

Introduction

A global obesity pandemic, resulting at least in part from altered dietary practices and a decline in physical activity, continues to emerge. Consistent with cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) negatively regulating PKG Iα [14,15], scenarios in which this second messenger is reduced, such as when NO is less bioavailable, may potentiate oxidation of the kinase to perhaps causatively mediate dysfunction [12] Consistent with these ideas, pharmacological agents that elevate cGMP or mice expressing C42S PKG Iα that is resistant to disulfide formation [12,13] demonstrate cardioprotection. NOS uncoupling has a two-fold, synergistic impact on PKG Iα oxidation This is because uncoupling results in an elevation in oxidants that may target the kinase, but the associated loss of NO will lower cGMP levels that otherwise negatively regulate PKG Iα disulfide formation. By comparing the response of transgenic knock-in (KI) mice expressing C42S PKG Iα, which is fully resistant to inter-chain disulfide formation at cysteine 42, to wild-type (WT) we sought to define the impact of obesity-induced PKG Iα oxidative activation on cardiovascular function

Cell experiments and studies with eNOS uncoupling agents in mice
High fat feeding study in mice
Uncoupling of NOS in vitro causes PKG Iα disulfide dimerization
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