Abstract
Recently, we screened for cardiac genes induced by metabolic stress and identified neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) as a candidate. This study aimed to clarify the expression pattern of NCAM in human cardiomyopathy. A total of 64 cardiac tissue samples of patients with dilated cardiomyopathy were dichotomized according to the immunohistochemically determined signal intensity of NCAM staining (NCAM-high and NCAM-low groups). Clinical and hemodynamic data of the patients were compared between the 2 groups. Fibrosis area, left ventricular end-diastolic volume index, and left ventricular diastolic pressure were greater in the NCAM-high group (22.8% versus 11.6%, P<0.05; 130.3±57.6 versus 104.8±31.7 mL/m(2), P<0.05; 14.3±8.0 versus 8.8±4.7 mm Hg, P<0.005; respectively). Incidence of cardiac death and admission for worsening heart failure was higher in the NCAM-high group during a follow-up of 6.3 years (log-rank P<0.05). Another 18 tissue samples were analyzed to determine the relationships between expression level of NCAM and major metabolic genes as well as hemodynamic parameters. The mRNA level of NCAM correlated with the serum (r=0.58; P=0.01) and mRNA levels (r=0.61; P=0.008) of brain-derived natriuretic peptides. It was also correlated with the mRNA levels of proliferator-activated receptor-γ coactivator-1 α (r=0.69; P=0.002) and the nuclear respiratory factor 1 (r=0.74; P<0.001). Expression of NCAM was associated with worsening hemodynamic parameters and major metabolic genes. Together with our previous findings, these data support the involvement of NCAM in left ventricular remodeling, revealing new insights into the pathophysiology of heart failure.
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