Basic research in cardiology | Vol.88, Issue.2 | | Pages 179-91
Down-regulated beta-adrenoceptors in severely failing human ventricles: uniform regional distribution, but no increased internalization.
In chronic heart failure cardiac beta-adrenoceptors are decreased. In this study we investigated whether a) in severely failing human ventricles beta-adrenoceptors are uniformly decreased or regional variations exist, and b) the beta-adrenoceptor decrease is caused by increased internalization or is a real loss in beta-adrenoceptors. For this purpose we assessed beta-adrenoceptor number and subtype distribution in a particulate fraction (mainly sarcolemmal plasma membranes) and a light vesicle fraction of right and left ventricular segments (obtained by cutting transversal rings of 2 cm from the midventricular regions) of explanted hearts from 2 patients with end-stage congestive dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and one patient with end-stage ischemic cardiomyopathy (ICM). In all three hearts ventricular beta-adrenoceptor number was very low (7.5-10 and 21-26 fmol/mg protein in DCM, 15-22 fmol/mg protein in ICM compared to 68-74 fmol/mg protein in non-failing ventricles). beta-Adrenoceptors were uniformly decreased over the whole ventricular region and no considerable regional variations existed. The same held true for beta 1- and beta 2-adrenoceptors. In ICM decrease in beta-adrenoceptors was due to a concomitant reduction in beta 1- and beta 2-adrenoceptors, in DCM it was mainly caused by beta 1-adrenoceptor down-regulation. In all ventricular segments investigated light vesicle beta-adrenoceptors amounted to about 5-7% of total ventricular beta-adrenoceptors, and this was not significantly different from non-failing left ventricles. We conclude that a) in severely failing human ventricles beta-adrenoceptors are evenly down-regulated and no regional variations exist, and b) the decrease in beta-adrenoceptors is not due to enhanced internalization but is a real loss of beta-adrenoceptors.
Original Text (This is the original text for your reference.)
Down-regulated beta-adrenoceptors in severely failing human ventricles: uniform regional distribution, but no increased internalization.
In chronic heart failure cardiac beta-adrenoceptors are decreased. In this study we investigated whether a) in severely failing human ventricles beta-adrenoceptors are uniformly decreased or regional variations exist, and b) the beta-adrenoceptor decrease is caused by increased internalization or is a real loss in beta-adrenoceptors. For this purpose we assessed beta-adrenoceptor number and subtype distribution in a particulate fraction (mainly sarcolemmal plasma membranes) and a light vesicle fraction of right and left ventricular segments (obtained by cutting transversal rings of 2 cm from the midventricular regions) of explanted hearts from 2 patients with end-stage congestive dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and one patient with end-stage ischemic cardiomyopathy (ICM). In all three hearts ventricular beta-adrenoceptor number was very low (7.5-10 and 21-26 fmol/mg protein in DCM, 15-22 fmol/mg protein in ICM compared to 68-74 fmol/mg protein in non-failing ventricles). beta-Adrenoceptors were uniformly decreased over the whole ventricular region and no considerable regional variations existed. The same held true for beta 1- and beta 2-adrenoceptors. In ICM decrease in beta-adrenoceptors was due to a concomitant reduction in beta 1- and beta 2-adrenoceptors, in DCM it was mainly caused by beta 1-adrenoceptor down-regulation. In all ventricular segments investigated light vesicle beta-adrenoceptors amounted to about 5-7% of total ventricular beta-adrenoceptors, and this was not significantly different from non-failing left ventricles. We conclude that a) in severely failing human ventricles beta-adrenoceptors are evenly down-regulated and no regional variations exist, and b) the decrease in beta-adrenoceptors is not due to enhanced internalization but is a real loss of beta-adrenoceptors.
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