Nitric oxide–sensitive guanylyl cyclase stimulation improves experimental heart failure with preserved ejection fraction

Heart Failure Male Heart Ventricles Morpholines Angiotensinogen Drug Evaluation, Preclinical Administration, Oral Arrhythmias, Cardiac Blood Pressure Isolated Heart Preparation Rats 3. Good health Disease Models, Animal 03 medical and health sciences Pyrimidines Soluble Guanylyl Cyclase 0302 clinical medicine Echocardiography Chronic Disease Renin Animals Humans Rats, Transgenic
DOI: 10.1172/jci.insight.96006 Publication Date: 2018-02-23T15:16:14Z
ABSTRACT
Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) can arise from cardiac and vascular remodeling processes following long-lasting hypertension. Efficacy of common HF therapeutics is unsatisfactory in HFpEF. Evidence suggests that stimulators of the nitric oxide-sensitive soluble guanylyl cyclase (NOsGC) could be of use here. We aimed to characterize the complex cardiovascular effects of NOsGC stimulation using NO-independent stimulator BAY 41-8543 in a double-transgenic rat (dTGR) model of HFpEF. We show a drastically improved survival rate of treated dTGR. We observed less cardiac fibrosis, macrophage infiltration, and gap junction remodeling in treated dTGR. Microarray analysis revealed that treatment of dTGR corrected the dysregulateion of cardiac genes associated with fibrosis, inflammation, apoptosis, oxidative stress, and ion channel function toward an expression profile similar to healthy controls. Treatment reduced systemic blood pressure levels and improved endothelium-dependent vasorelaxation of resistance vessels. Further comprehensive in vivo phenotyping showed an improved diastolic cardiac function, improved hemodynamics, and less susceptibility to ventricular arrhythmias. Short-term BAY 41-8543 application in isolated untreated transgenic hearts with structural remodeling significantly reduced the occurrence of ventricular arrhythmias, suggesting a direct nongenomic role of NOsGC stimulation on excitation. Thus, NOsGC stimulation was highly effective in improving several HFpEF facets in this animal model, underscoring its potential value for patients.
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