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  • Title: Regulation of the rat atrial natriuretic peptide gene after acute imposition of left ventricular pressure overload.
    Author: Cornelius T, Holmer SR, Müller FU, Riegger GA, Schunkert H.
    Journal: Hypertension; 1997 Dec; 30(6):1348-55. PubMed ID: 9403552.
    Abstract:
    The upregulation of left ventricular (LV) atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) mRNA is a highly conserved marker of cardiac hypertrophy. The aim of this study was to further examine the pathway leading to ANP induction during pressure overload of the heart. Systolic wall stress was imposed acutely on isovolumetrically beating rat hearts in a Langendorff apparatus (sigma-=300 x 10[3] dyne/cm2). Northern and Western blots revealed that elevated wall stress induced LV c-fos and c-jun mRNAs (3.5- and 3-fold, P<.05 after 60 minutes), c-Fos and c-Jun proteins (3.9- and 4.3-fold, P<.05 after 120 minutes), as well as ANP mRNA (2.2-fold, P<.05 after 120 minutes). ANP upregulation was prevented by inhibition of protein synthesis (cycloheximide). Electrophoresis mobility shift assays were performed to link c-Fos and c-Jun (ie, components of the heterodimeric transcription factor AP-1) and ANP induction. A putative AP-1 binding site within the rat ANP promoter (nucleotides -512 to -473) bound specifically to nuclear proteins of wall stress-stimulated hearts. Antibodies directed against c-Fos protein resulted in a shift of this DNA/protein complex, suggesting physical interaction between AP-1 and the ANP promoter. Myocardial transfection of promoter constructs revealed that after acute imposition of wall stress, this AP-1 site enhanced a reporter gene (8- to 10-fold compared with a minimal promoter, P<.05). Interestingly, nuclear extracts of stimulated hearts as well as pure AP-1 protein bound to a putative CRE site (nucleotides -613 to -584) as well. Like the AP-1 site, this cAMP-responsible element (CRE) site was found to enhance the transfected ANP promoter/reporter gene significantly (17.5-fold, P<.05). Mutation of either AP-1 or CRE sites did not decrease reporter gene activity, whereas mutation of both resulted in loss of inducibility. These experiments suggest that LV ANP regulation after acute wall stress includes the activation of AP-1 and/or CRE cis acting elements. However, the transient nature of c-fos and c-jun upregulation also suggests that AP-1 is not the only mediator of ANP induction in LV hypertrophy.
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