Regulation of extracellular matrix proteins in pressure-overload cardiac hypertrophy: effects of angiotensin converting enzyme inhibition

D Grimm, EP Kromer, W Böcker… - Journal of …, 1998 - journals.lww.com
D Grimm, EP Kromer, W Böcker, G Bruckschlegel, SR Holmer, GAJ Riegger, H Schunkert
Journal of hypertension, 1998journals.lww.com
Objective Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is characterized by remodeling of both myocyte
and interstitial compartments of the heart. The aim of this investigation was to study the
effects of angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibition on alterations in the composition
of the interstitium in chronic pressure-overload hypertrophy. Design LVH was induced in
weanling rats by banding the ascending aorta. Animals with aortic banding received either
vehicle (n= 20), hydralazine (20 mg/kg per day, n= 20), or the ACE inhibitor ramipril (10 …
Objective Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is characterized by remodeling of both myocyte and interstitial compartments of the heart. The aim of this investigation was to study the effects of angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibition on alterations in the composition of the interstitium in chronic pressure-overload hypertrophy.
Design LVH was induced in weanling rats by banding the ascending aorta. Animals with aortic banding received either vehicle (n= 20), hydralazine (20 mg/kg per day, n= 20), or the ACE inhibitor ramipril (10 mg/kg per day, n= 20) during weeks 6-12 after banding.
Results Compared with sham-operated, untreated rats (n= 20), aortic-banded vehicle and hydralazine-treated rats displayed substantially increased left ventricular weights and myocyte diameters whereas ramipril significantly blunted the hypertrophic response at the myocyte level (each P< 0.001) as well as the increase in left ventricular weight (each P< 0.01). In addition, image analysis revealed a significant induction of perivascular and interstitial tissue accumulation in vehicle and hydralazine-treated rats (2.5-fold, each P< 0.0001). In contrast, ramipril-treated rats displayed attenuated interstitial and perivascular fibrosis, both being significantly diminished compared with vehicle and hydralazine-treated rats (each P< 0.001). Further, vehicle and hydralazine-treated rats were characterized by elevated steady-state messenger (m) RNA levels of fibronectin (2.7-and 2.8-fold, P< 0.005), collagen I (2.0-and 1.8-fold, P< 0.0005), collagen III (both 2.2-fold, P< 0.001) and laminin B (1.6-and 1.6-fold, P< 0.005). In parallel, the corresponding immunohistochemical signals were markedly enhanced in these groups. In comparison, ramipril significantly blunted the induction of collagen I and III, laminin B and fibronectin at both the mRNA and protein levels. These morphological and molecular differences between the hydralazine and ramipril groups could not be attributed to differences in left ventricular pressures, which were markedly elevated in all aortic stenosis rats (1.9-fold, each P< 0.001 versus sham). In fact, given that ramipril but not hydralazine blunted the hypertrophic response to pressure overload, the echocardiographic measurements revealed that left ventricular systolic wall stress was higher in the ramipril group (70±1 versus 34±0.7 kdyn/cm 2; P< 0.02).
Conclusions ACE inhibition may limit both myocyte and interstitial remodeling despite ongoing cardiac pressure overload.
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins