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Submitted on January 7, 2008
From the Department of Chemical and Systems Biology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, Calif. * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: mochly{at}stanford.edu.
Abstract—Studies on genetically manipulated mice suggest a role for
Revised on January 23, 2008
Pharmacological Inhibition of
Koichi Inagaki;
-Protein Kinase C Attenuates Cardiac Fibrosis and Dysfunction in Hypertension-Induced Heart Failure
-protein kinase C (
PKC) in cardiac hypertrophy and in heart failure. The potential clinical relevance of these findings was tested here using a pharmacological inhibitor of
PKC activity during the progression to heart failure in hypertensive Dahl rats. Dahl rats, fed an 8% high-salt diet from the age of 6 weeks, exhibited compensatory cardiac hypertrophy by 11 weeks, followed by heart failure at
17 weeks and death by the age of
20 weeks (123±3 days). Sustained treatment between weeks 11 and 17 with the selective
PKC inhibitor
V1-2 or with an angiotensin II receptor blocker olmesartan prolonged animal survival by
5 weeks (
V1-2: 154±7 days; olmesartan: 149±5 days). These treatments resulted in improved fractional shortening (
V1-2: 58±2%; olmesartan: 53±2%; saline: 41±6%) and decreased cardiac parenchymal fibrosis when measured at 17 weeks without lowering blood pressure at any time during the treatment. Combined treatment with
V1-2, together with olmesartan, prolonged animal survival by 5 weeks (37 days) relative to olmesartan alone (from 160±5 to 197±14 days, respectively) and by
11 weeks (74 days) on average relative to saline-treated animals, suggesting that the pathway inhibited by
PKC inhibition is not identical to the olmesartan-induced effect. These data suggest that an
PKC-selective inhibitor such as
V1-2 may have a potential in augmenting current therapeutic strategies for the treatment of heart failure in humans.
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