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      Whither digitalis? What we can still learn from cardiotonic steroids about heart failure and hypertension.

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          Abstract

          Cloning of the "Na+ pump" (Na+,K+-ATPase or NKA) and identification of a circulating ligand, endogenous ouabain (EO), a cardiotonic steroid (CTS), triggered seminal discoveries regarding EO and its NKA receptor in cardiovascular function and the pathophysiology of heart failure (HF) and hypertension. Cardiotonic digitalis preparations were a preferred treatment for HF for two centuries, but digoxin was only marginally effective in a large clinical trial (1997). This led to diminished digoxin use. Missing from the trial, however, was any consideration that endogenous CTS might influence digitalis' efficacy. Digoxin, at therapeutic concentrations, acutely inhibits NKA but, remarkably, antagonizes ouabain's action. Prolonged treatment with ouabain, but not digoxin, causes hypertension in rodents; in this model, digoxin lowers blood pressure (BP). Furthermore, NKA-bound ouabain and digoxin modulate different protein kinase signaling pathways and have disparate long-term cardiovascular effects. Reports of "brain ouabain" led to the elucidation of a new, slow neuromodulatory pathway in the brain; locally generated EO and the α2 NKA isoform help regulate sympathetic drive to the heart and vasculature. The roles of EO and α2 NKA have been studied by EO assay, ouabain-resistant mutation of α2 NKA, and immunoneutralization of EO with ouabain-binding Fab fragments. The NKA α2 CTS binding site and its endogenous ligand are required for BP elevation in many common hypertension models and full expression of cardiac remodeling and dysfunction following pressure overload or myocardial infarction. Understanding how endogenous CTS impact hypertension and HF pathophysiology and therapy should foster reconsideration of digoxin's therapeutic utility.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol
          American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology
          American Physiological Society
          1522-1539
          0363-6135
          Dec 01 2022
          : 323
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Physiology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
          [2 ] Department of Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
          [3 ] Brain and Heart Research Group, University of Ottawa Heart Institute, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
          Article
          10.1152/ajpheart.00362.2022
          36367691
          64231a24-0491-4f51-a5f9-7e2687c1cd35
          History

          heart failure,cardiac glycosides,sodium pump,ouabain,hypertension

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