PDK1 plays a critical role in regulating cardiac function in mice and human.
- Author:
Ruo-min DI
1
;
Qiu-ting FENG
;
Zai CHANG
;
Qing LUAN
;
Yang-yang ZHANG
;
Jun HUANG
;
Xin-Li LI
;
Zhong-zhou YANG
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH: 3-Phosphoinositide-Dependent Protein Kinases; Adult; Animals; Female; Glycogen Synthase Kinase 3; physiology; Heart; physiology; Heart Failure; enzymology; etiology; Humans; Male; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Knockout; Middle Aged; Myosin Heavy Chains; physiology; Protein-Serine-Threonine Kinases; metabolism; Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt; physiology; Signal Transduction; Tamoxifen; pharmacology
- From: Chinese Medical Journal 2010;123(17):2358-2363
- CountryChina
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
BACKGROUNDPDK1 is an essential protein kinase that plays a critical role in mammalian development. Mouse lacking PDK1 leads to multiple abnormalities and embryonic lethality at E9.5. To elucidate the role of PDK1 in the heart, we investigated the cardiac phenotype of mice that lack PDK1 in the heart in different growth periods and the alteration of PDK1 signaling in human failing heart.
METHODSWe employed Cre/loxP system to generate PDK1(flox/flox): α-MHC-Cre mice, which specifically deleted PDK1 in cardiac muscle at birth, and tamoxifen-inducible heart-specific PDK1 knockout mice (PDK1(flox/flox):MerCreMer mice), in which PDK1 was deleted in myocardium in response to the treatment with tamoxifen. Transmural myocardial tissues from human failing hearts and normal hearts were sampled from the left ventricular apex to analyze the activity of PDK1/Akt signaling pathways by Western blotting.
RESULTSPDK1(flox/flox): α-MHC-Cre mice died of heart failure at 5 and 10 weeks old. PDK1(flox/flox) -MerCreMer mice died of heart failure from 5 to 21 weeks after the initiation of tamoxifen treatment at 8 weeks old. We found that expression levels of PDK1 in human failing heart tissues were significantly decreased compared with control hearts.
CONCLUSIONOur results suggest that PDK1 signaling network takes part in regulating cardiac viability and function in mice, and may be also involved in human heart failure disease.