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Cell Growth and Development

Cardiac p300 Is Involved in Myocyte Growth with Decompensated Heart Failure

, , , , , , , & show all
Pages 3593-3606 | Received 13 Jan 2003, Accepted 20 Feb 2003, Published online: 27 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

A variety of stresses on the heart initiate a number of subcellular signaling pathways, which finally reach the nuclei of cardiac myocytes and cause myocyte hypertrophy with heart failure. However, common nuclear pathways that lead to this state are unknown. A zinc finger protein, GATA-4, is one of the transcription factors that mediate changes in gene expression during myocardial-cell hypertrophy. p300 not only acts as a transcriptional coactivator of GATA-4, but also possesses an intrinsic histone acetyltransferase activity. In primary cardiac myocytes derived from neonatal rats, we show that stimulation with phenylephrine increased an acetylated form of GATA-4 and its DNA-binding activity, as well as expression of p300. A dominant-negative mutant of p300 suppressed phenylephrine-induced nuclear acetylation, activation of GATA-4-dependent endothelin-1 promoters, and hypertrophic responses, such as increase in cell size and sarcomere organization. In sharp contrast to the activation of cardiac MEK-1, which phosphorylates GATA-4 and causes compensated hypertrophy in vivo, p300-mediated acetylation of mouse cardiac nuclear proteins, including GATA-4, results in marked eccentric dilatation and systolic dysfunction. These findings suggest that p300-mediated nuclear acetylation plays a critical role in the development of myocyte hypertrophy and represents a pathway that leads to decompensated heart failure.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This work was supported in part by the Advanced and Innovational Research program in Life Science and by grants to T.K. and K.H. from the Ministry of Education, Science and Culture of Japan.

We thank N. Sowa for his excellent technical assistance.

Three authors, T. Yanazume, T. Morimoto, and T. Kawamura, equally contributed to this work.

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