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      Cardiac-specific blockade of NF-kappaB in cardiac pathophysiology: differences between acute and chronic stimuli in vivo.

      American Journal of Physiology - Heart and Circulatory Physiology
      Animals, Blotting, Southern, Blotting, Western, Cardiomyopathies, metabolism, physiopathology, Cytokines, pharmacology, Echocardiography, Heart, I-kappa B Proteins, genetics, Mice, Mice, Transgenic, Mutation, Myocardial Infarction, etiology, pathology, Myocardial Reperfusion Injury, complications, Myocardium, NF-kappa B, antagonists & inhibitors, Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha

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          Abstract

          The role of NF-kappaB in cardiac physiology and pathophysiology has been difficult to delineate due to the inability to specifically block NF-kappaB signaling in the heart. Cardiac-specific transgenic models have recently been developed that repress NF-kappaB activation by preventing phosphorylation at specific serine residues of the inhibitory kappaB (IkappaB) protein isoform IkappaBalpha. However, these models are unable to completely block NF-kappaB because of a second signaling pathway that regulates NF-kappaB function via Tyr42 phosphorylation of IkappaBalpha. We report the development of transgenic (3M) mouse lines that express the mutant IkappaBalpha(S32A,S36A,Y42F) in a cardiac-specific manner. NF-kappaB activation in cardiomyopathic TNF-1.6 mice is completely blocked by the 3M transgene but only partially blocked (70-80%) by the previously described double-mutant 2M [IkappaBalpha(S32A,S36A)] transgene, which demonstrates the action of two proximal pathways for NF-kappaB activation in TNF-alpha-induced cardiomyopathy. In contrast, after acute stimuli including administration of TNF-alpha and ischemia-reperfusion (I/R), NF-kappaB activation is blocked in both 2M and 3M transgenic mice. This result suggests that phosphorylation of the regulatory Ser32 and Ser36 predominantly mediates NF-kappaB activation in these situations. We show that infarct size after I/R is reduced by 70% in 3M transgenic mice, which conclusively demonstrates that NF-kappaB is involved in I/R injury. In summary, we have engineered novel transgenic mice that allow us to distinguish two major proximal pathways for NF-kappaB activation. Our results demonstrate that the serine and tyrosine phosphorylation pathways are differentially activated during different pathophysiological processes (cardiomyopathy and I/R injury) and that NF-kappaB contributes to infarct development after I/R.

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