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ESC Heart Fail ; 7(5): 2992-3002, 2020 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32710603

ABSTRACT

AIMS: Inhibition of neprilysin and angiotensin II receptor by sacubitril/valsartan (Val) (LCZ696) reduces mortality in heart failure (HF) patients compared with sole inhibition of renin-angiotensin system. Beneficial effects of increased natriuretic peptide levels upon neprilysin inhibition have been proposed, whereas direct effects of sacubitrilat (Sac) (LBQ657) on myocardial Ca2+ cycling remain elusive. METHODS AND RESULTS: Confocal microscopy (Fluo-4 AM) was used to investigate pro-arrhythmogenic sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ leak in freshly isolated murine and human ventricular cardiomyocytes (CMs) upon Sac (40 µmol/L)/Val (13 µmol/L) treatment. The concentrations of Sac and Val equalled plasma concentrations of LCZ696 treatment used in PARADIGM-HF trial. Epifluorescence microscopy measurements (Fura-2 AM) were performed to investigate effects on systolic Ca2+ release, SR Ca2+ load, and Ca2+ -transient kinetics in freshly isolated murine ventricular CMs. The impact of Sac on myocardial contractility was evaluated using in toto-isolated, isometrically twitching ventricular trabeculae from human hearts with end-stage HF. Under basal conditions, the combination of Sac/Val did not influence diastolic Ca2+ -spark frequency (CaSpF) nor pro-arrhythmogenic SR Ca2 leak in isolated murine ventricular CMs (n CMs/hearts = 80/7 vs. 100/7, P = 0.91/0.99). In contrast, Sac/Val treatment reduced CaSpF by 35 ± 9% and SR Ca2+ leak by 45 ± 9% in CMs put under catecholaminergic stress (isoproterenol 30 nmol/L, n = 81/7 vs. 62/7, P < 0.001 each). This could be attributed to Sac, as sole Sac treatment also reduced both parameters by similar degrees (reduction of CaSpF by 57 ± 7% and SR Ca2+ leak by 76 ± 5%; n = 101/4 vs. 108/4, P < 0.01 each), whereas sole Val treatment did not. Systolic Ca2+ release, SR Ca2+ load, and Ca2+ -transient kinetics including SERCA activity (kSERCA ) were not compromised by Sac in isolated murine CMs (n = 41/6 vs. 39/6). Importantly, the combination of Sac/Val and Sac alone also reduced diastolic CaSpF and SR Ca2+ leak (reduction by 74 ± 7%) in human left ventricular CMs from patients with end-stage HF (n = 71/8 vs. 78/8, P < 0.05 each). Myocardial contractility of human ventricular trabeculae was not acutely affected by Sac treatment as the developed force remained unchanged over a time course of 30 min (n trabeculae/hearts = 3/3 vs. 4/3). CONCLUSION: This study demonstrates that neprilysin inhibitor Sac directly improves Ca2+ homeostasis in human end-stage HF by reducing pro-arrhythmogenic SR Ca2+ leak without acutely affecting systolic Ca2+ release and inotropy. These effects might contribute to the mortality benefits observed in the PARADIGM-HF trial.


Subject(s)
Heart Failure , Sarcoplasmic Reticulum , Animals , Arrhythmias, Cardiac , Calcium , Heart Failure/drug therapy , Humans , Mice , Myocytes, Cardiac
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