Chronic dantrolene treatment attenuates cardiac dysfunction and reduces atrial fibrillation inducibility in a rat myocardial infarction heart failure model

Author(s)

Nofi, C., Zhang, K., Tang, Y.-D., Li, Y., Migirov, A., Ojamaa, K., Gerdes, A. M., & Zhang, Y.

Title

Chronic dantrolene treatment attenuates cardiac dysfunction and reduces atrial fibrillation inducibility in a rat myocardial infarction heart failure model

Date

2020

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Subject

Atrial fibrillation
Cardiac ryanodine receptor
Dantrolene
Heart failure
Ryanodine receptor stabilizer

Language

English

Abstract

Background

Cardiac ryanodine receptor 2 (RyR2) dysfunction and elevated diastolic Ca2+ leak have been linked to arrhythmogenesis not only in inherited arrhythmia syndromes but also in acquired forms of heart disease including heart failure (HF) and atrial fibrillation (AF). Thus, stabilizing RyR2 may exert therapeutic effects in these conditions.

Objective

The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of stabilizing RyR2 with chronic dantrolene treatment on HF development and AF inducibility in a myocardial infarction (MI)–induced HF model in rats.

Methods

MI was induced in adult Sprague-Dawley rats by ligation of the left anterior descending coronary artery. Two weeks after MI surgery, rats with large MI (≥40%) were randomly assigned to MI-vehicle (n = 14) or MI-dantrolene (10 mg/kg/d; n = 13) groups. Sham-surgery rats (n = 7) served as controls.

Results

Compared to the MI-vehicle group, 4-week dantrolene treatment significantly improved cardiac function, with increased left ventricular (LV) fractional shortening (19.48% ± 3.61% vs 15.43% ± 2.65%; P <.01), and decreased LV end-diastolic pressure (12.58 ± 8.52 mm Hg vs 21.91 ± 7.25 mm Hg; P <.01), left atrial diameter (4.97 ± 0.75 mm vs 6.09 ± 1.53 mm; P <.05), and fibrosis content (6.42% ± 0.78% vs 9.76% ± 2.25%; P <.001). Dantrolene significantly decreased AF inducibility (69% in MI-vehicle vs 23% in MI-dantrolene; P <.05). Dantrolene treatment was associated with reduced RyR2 phosphorylation and favorably altered gene expression involving ion channels, sympathetic signaling, oxidative stress, and inflammatory markers.

Conclusion

Chronic dantrolene treatment attenuated LV dysfunction and reduced AF inducibility, which was associated with decreased RyR2 phosphorylation and normalization of many adverse changes in gene expression. Thus, stabilizing RyR2 with chronic dantrolene treatment is a promising novel strategy for decreasing AF in HF.

Source

Heart Rhythm O2, Volume 2, Issue 1, February 2021, Pages 111-112

Rights

CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 DEED Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International

Format

PDF

Type

Text

Bibliographic Citation

Nofi, C., Zhang, K., Tang, Y.-D., Li, Y., Migirov, A., Ojamaa, K., Gerdes, A. M., & Zhang, Y. (2020). Chronic dantrolene treatment attenuates cardiac dysfunction and reduces atrial fibrillation inducibility in a rat myocardial infarction heart failure model. In Heart Rhythm O2 (Vol. 1, Issue 2, pp. 126–135). Elsevier BV. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hroo.2020.03.004

Files

1-s2.0-S266650182030012X-main.pdf

Citation

Nofi, C., Zhang, K., Tang, Y.-D., Li, Y., Migirov, A., Ojamaa, K., Gerdes, A. M., & Zhang, Y., Chronic dantrolene treatment attenuates cardiac dysfunction and reduces atrial fibrillation inducibility in a rat myocardial infarction heart failure model. Heart Rhythm O2, Volume 2, Issue 1, February 2021, Pages 111-112, New York Tech Institutional Repository, accessed April 27, 2024, https://repository.nyitlibrary.org/items/show/3748

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