当前位置: 首页 > 医学版 > 期刊论文 > 内科学 > 循环学杂志 > 2005年 > 第4期 > 正文
编号:11176110
Hyperhomocysteinemia, a Cardiac Metabolic Disease
http://www.100md.com 循环学杂志 2005年第4期
     the Department of Physiology, New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY.

    Abstract

    Background— Hyperhomocysteinemia (HHcy) is a reliable indicator of cardiovascular disease, in part because of the production of superoxide and scavenging of nitric oxide (NO). The present study assessed the impact of HHcy on the NO-dependent control of cardiac O2 consumption and examined enzymatic sources of superoxide.

    Methods and Results— Rats and mice were fed methionine in drinking water for 5 to 9 weeks to increase plasma homocysteine, a process that did not cause significant changes in hemodynamic function. The ability of the NO agonists bradykinin and carbachol to reduce myocardial O2 consumption in vitro was impaired by 40% in methionine-fed rats, and this impairment was proportional to their individual plasma homocysteine concentration. However, responses were restored in the presence of ascorbic acid, tempol, and apocynin, which inhibits NADPH oxidase assembly. Western blots showed no difference in Cu/Zn or Mn superoxide dismutase, endothelial NO synthase, or inducible NO synthase protein, but HHcy caused a 100% increase in the p22phox subunit of NADPH oxidase. Western blots with plasma membrane–enriched fractions of cell lysate detected elevated levels of p22phox, p67phox, and rac-1, which indicates increased oxidase assembly. Finally, mice lacking a functional gp91phox subunit of NADPH oxidase demonstrated normal NO-dependent regulation of myocardial O2 consumption after methionine feeding.

    Conclusions— In HHcy, superoxide produced by NADPH oxidase reduces the ability of NO to regulate mitochondrial function in the myocardium. The severity of this effect is proportional to the increase in homocysteine.

    Key Words: homocysteine ; nitric oxide ; free radicals

    Introduction

    Basic and clinical research has established that an increase in plasma homocysteine (Hcy) is an independent and graded risk factor for cardiovascular disease. McCully1 was the first to propose such a relationship in 1969 after finding postmortem evidence of atherosclerosis in patients with hyperhomocysteinemia (HHcy). Subsequent studies have linked even mildly or moderately elevated plasma concentrations of Hcy, a sulfur-containing amino acid produced via methionine metabolism, to coronary artery disease2,3 and consequent mortality,4 peripheral vascular disease,5 venous thrombosis,6 myocardial infarction,7 and stroke,8 but the mechanism by which HHcy increases one’s risk for heart disease remains unclear.

    Nitric oxide (NO) has been established as an important molecule in the regulation of cardiovascular function. In addition to its prominent roles in controlling vascular tone and platelet aggregation, NO regulates tissue O2 consumption by reversibly inhibiting cytochrome c oxidase in the mitochondrial respiratory chain.9–11 In the cardiovascular system, NO is synthesized in the thin endothelial lining of blood vessels by endothelial NO synthase (eNOS), which acts on the substrate L-arginine; however, NO reacts rapidly with reactive oxygen species, and the degradation of NO by superoxide (O2–) has been shown in studies on atherosclerosis, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, heart failure, cardiac hypertrophy, and aging.12–15 These articles implicate NADPH oxidase—a large enzyme composed primarily of 2 membrane-bound subunits (p22phox and gp91phox), 3 cytosolic subunits (p40phox, p47phox, and p67phox), and GTP-binding proteins (such as rac-1)16—as a primary enzymatic source of O2– in cardiovascular disease states.

    Recent studies have also detected elevated levels of O2– in HHcy, which results in impaired NO-dependent vasodilation.17–20 Such dysfunction of coronary endothelium-mediated relaxation is a strong predictor of atherosclerotic disease and future cardiovascular events.21 However, the means by which O2– levels are increased in HHcy have not yet been elucidated, and because the hypertension of HHcy is less profound than that after complete NO synthesis inhibition, it is plausible that only certain functions of NO activity are altered. Therefore, the causes, extent, and consequences of NO inactivation in HHcy all require further investigation.

    We hypothesized that the ability of NO to regulate myocardial O2 consumption is impaired in rats and mice with methionine diet–induced HHcy and that this is O2–-dependent. To investigate this contention, we included studies directed toward (1) the effect of antioxidant treatment on NO bioactivity, (2) the quantification of various proteins involved in the synthesis and degradation of O2–, (3) the assessment of hemodynamic function, and (4) the effect of HHcy in genetically modified mice that lack a functional gp91phox subunit of NADPH oxidase.

    Methods

    Male Wistar-Kyoto rats were obtained from Jackson Laboratories (Bar Harbor, Me) at an age of 3 months and fed for 5 to 8 weeks. To raise the plasma Hcy levels of the experimental group, the amino acid methionine was added to the drinking water of half the animals (9 g/L). Additional experiments were performed in genetically modified B6.129S6-Cybbtm1Din/J mice (Jackson), which exhibit the X-linked chronic granulomatous disease because they lack a functional gp91phox component to assemble NADPH oxidase,22 and corresponding wild-type mice (strain C57BL/6J). These mice were obtained at an age of 5 weeks and fed for an additional 9 weeks, with half of the animals from both genotypes receiving methionine. All methods were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of New York Medical College and followed the current guidelines of the National Institutes of Health and American Physiological Society for the use and care of laboratory animals.

    Hemodynamic Measurements

    A noninvasive blood pressure monitor (NIBP-8, Columbus Instruments) was used to assess resting heart rate and blood pressure in rats (n=10 for both control and methionine-fed rats) and mice (n=9 wild-type mice, n=6 wild-type mice fed methionine, n=7 knockout mice, and n=5 knockout mice fed methionine). Animals were conscious and motionless during the measurements, held inside narrow plastic tubes while their tails were heated to 40°C. The automatic inflation of cuffs occluded blood flow in the tail and allowed the calculation of heart rate and systolic, diastolic, and mean blood pressure. Several trials were repeated on consecutive days to allow the animals to grow accustomed to the procedure. Averages of the measurements taken on the final day were used for statistical analysis.

    In a separate set of experiments, transthoracic echocardiography was performed with an Acuson Sequoia 256 (Siemens Medical Solutions) connected to a 15-MHz linear transducer. Rats (n=8) were each anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital (50 mg/kg). From the parasternal short-axis view, images by the 2D-guided M-mode cursor were used to measure left ventricular (LV) dimensions in addition to interventricular septum and posterior wall thickness. All M-mode data were collected from an average of 3 consecutive cardiac cycles. Additionally, images from the bidimensional parasternal long-axis view were used to measure the LV diastolic (LVDA) and systolic (LVSA) areas. Ejection fraction was then calculated as (LVDA–LVSA)/LVDA and expressed as a percent.

    Cardiac Tissue Preparation and Measurement of O2 Consumption

    Rats and mice were anesthetized by injection of sodium pentobarbital (50 mg/kg). After blood was collected from the LV, the hearts were immediately removed and weighed. The atria and connecting tissue were then discarded, and the LV was isolated from the right ventricle, epicardium, and endocardium. Tissues were cut into small 15- to 35-mg pieces and incubated at 37°C in a Krebs-bicarbonate solution (containing, in mmol/L: NaCl 118, KCl 4.7, CaCl2 1.5, NaHCO3 25, KH2PO4 1.2, MgSO4 1.1, and glucose 5.6) bubbled with 21% O2/5% CO2/74% N2 (pH 7.4). After at least 1 hour of incubation, the samples were placed in constantly stirred chambers with 3 mL of air-saturated Krebs-bicarbonate solution containing 10 mmol/L HEPES. The chambers were sealed with Clark-type platinum O2 electrodes (Yellow Springs Instruments), which connected to YSI 5331 monitors (Yellow Springs) that measured the concentration of dissolved O2 in the solution. O2 consumption by the myocardial pieces was measured as the decrease in nanomoles of O2 per minute per gram of tissue, with the assumption that the initial O2 concentration of the solution was 224 nmol/mL.

    Effect of NO on Myocardial O2 Consumption

    In rat hearts, myocardial O2 consumption was measured at baseline and in response to cumulative doses (10–7 to 10–4 mol/L) of 1 of 3 drugs that release NO: the B2 kinin receptor agonist bradykinin (Sigma-Aldrich; n=12), the muscarinic 2 receptor agonist carbachol (Sigma-Aldrich; n=7), or the exogenous NO donor S-nitroso-N-acetyl-penicillamine (SNAP; Sigma-Aldrich; n=5). These responses were also examined in the presence of the NO synthase inhibitor N-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME; Sigma-Aldrich; n=7 for bradykinin and carbachol, n=5 for SNAP), which was added in a concentration of 10–3 mol/L to the tissue bath.

    In hearts from wild-type and gp91phox-knockout mice, myocardial O2 consumption was again measured at baseline and in response to cumulative doses (10–10 to 10–5 mol/L) of bradykinin. Responses were also examined in the presence of L-NAME.

    Effect of Antioxidants on NO-Regulated Myocardial O2 Consumption

    Rat LV tissues were incubated with 1 of 3 antioxidants (Sigma-Aldrich): the O2– scavenger ascorbic acid (n=5), the superoxide dismutase (SOD) mimetic tempol (n=5), or the NADPH oxidase inhibitor apocynin (n=5). Each agent was present at a concentration of 10–3 mol/L in the tissue bath. Myocardial O2 consumption was then assessed in response to cumulative doses of bradykinin (10–7 to 10–4 mol/L).

    Measurement of Plasma Hcy

    Plasma Hcy was quantified in rats (n=16) and mice (n=9) with a homocysteine microplate enzyme immunoassay (Bio-Rad Laboratories). All mixed disulphide and protein-bound forms of Hcy in plasma samples were first reduced by dithiothreitol to form free Hcy and then converted enzymatically to S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine (SAH) by SAH hydrolase and excess adenosine. Once placed inside the wells of a microtiter plate, the SAH in the sample competed with SAH bound to the walls of each well for a monoclonal anti-SAH antibody. The plate was then washed, thereby removing any antibody not bound to the wall, and a secondary rabbit anti-mouse antibody labeled with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was added. HRP activity was assessed with a Power Wave 200 spectrophotometer (Bio-Tek Instruments) at 450 nm after addition of the substrate tetramethylbenzidine. Because absorption by HRP was directly proportional to the quantity of anti-SAH antibody bound to the walls of the microtiter plate, it was inversely related to the level of Hcy in the original sample. Five control samples (with Hcy concentrations of 2, 4, 8, 15, 30, and 50 μmol/L) were run in this immunoassay to relate Hcy concentration to absorption by HRP, and a dose-response logistic curve was generated (SlideWrite Plus Version 6.00) to calculate the Hcy concentration of the experimental samples.

    Total Protein Western Blotting

    After being immersed in liquid nitrogen at –80°C, myocardial tissues (n=12 for methionine-fed rats; n=9 for control rats) were manually ground and subsequently homogenized in lysis buffer (0.05 mol/L Tris-HCl at pH 7.2, 1 mmol/L EDTA, 10 mmol/L dithiothreitol, 1 mg/mL PMSF, 100 μg/mL leupeptin, 100 μg/mL soybean trypsin inhibitor, and 20 μg/mL aprotinin) 3 times for 15 seconds. After 1 minute of sonication, samples were centrifuged for 10 minutes at 13 000 rpm, and the protein concentrations of the resulting supernatants were assessed with the Bio-Rad Protein Assay. Solutions of supernatant and loading dye were prepared to contain 75 μg of protein and then loaded into separate lanes of a 10% polyacrylamide gel that contained the detergent SDS. Standard techniques for electrophoresis (150 V) and Western blotting were used to separate proteins by molecular weight and transfer them to polyvinylidene difluoride membranes. After 1 hour of incubation with 5% milk/PBS to block all remaining protein-binding sites, the membrane was allowed to incubate overnight in 1% milk/PBS with antibodies to eNOS (BD Transduction Laboratories; 1:1000 dilution), inducible NO synthase (iNOS; BD Transduction; 1:1000 dilution), Cu/Zn SOD (SOD-1; BD Transduction; 1:5000 dilution), Mn SOD (SOD-2; CalBioChem-NovaBioChem Corporation; 1:10 000 dilution), or 1 of the following subunits of NADPH oxidase: p22phox (Santa Cruz Biotechnology; 1:2500 dilution), gp91phox (BD Transduction; 1:1000 dilution), p40phox (Santa Cruz; 1:1500 dilution), p47phox (Santa Cruz; 1:1500 dilution), p67phox (Upstate, Inc; 1:2000 dilution), or rac-1 (Santa Cruz; 1:5000 dilution). Finally, a secondary antibody labeled with HRP was added with 1% milk/PBS for 2 hours. On addition of the Super Signal West Pico chemiluminescent substrate (Pierce), HRP produces light-absorbing bands that can be exposed on radiographic film (Kodak), and the absorption is proportional to the amount of protein present. Images were scanned and absorption was calculated with the Alphamager 2000 program (Alpha Innotech Corporation). ;-Actin protein (an indicator of total protein level) was quantified as a control.

    Western Blotting of Plasma Membrane Fractions

    Plasma membrane–enriched fractions (PMFs) from rat hearts were isolated as previously described by Lei et al.23 Briefly, after removal of the epicardium and endocardium, 2 g of frozen tissue was put into muscle homogenizing buffer (containing, in mmol/L: sucrose 100, EDTA 10, KCl 46, Tris-HCl 100, NaN3 5; pH 7.4) with a protease inhibitor cocktail (Roche Molecular). The tissue was minced into 2-mm pieces, further homogenized with a glass Douncer grinder, and centrifuged at 4000g for 10 minutes. The supernatant was mixed with a 50% wt/vol solution of iodoxanol (Opti-prep, Greiner Bio-One) and centrifuged at 65 000g for 16 hours. At the end of the centrifugation, 5 different layers could be detected visually. The top layer was further centrifuged at 200 000g for 1 hour to obtain the PMF. Western blotting with an Na+-K+-ATPase antibody was used to verify that the PMF had been isolated. The PMF was then used in Western blot electrophoresis for p22phox, gp91phox, p67phox, and rac-1.

    Statistical Analysis

    Differences from control were calculated with an unpaired t test (Microsoft Excel), and significance was determined at P<0.05. Regression analyses, including calculation of the r value, were performed with the least-squares test (SlideWrite).

    Results

    Hemodynamic Measurements in Rats

    All hemodynamic data are shown in the Table. Blood pressure and heart rate in conscious resting rats did not differ significantly between the control and methionine-fed groups. The ratio of heart weight to body weight was similar between the 2 groups, and echocardiography revealed that methionine feeding did not cause any significant changes in LV dimensions, wall thickness, ejection fraction, or fractional shortening.

    Hemodynamic Data

    Effect of Bradykinin or Carbachol on O2 Consumption

    LV tissues from both control and methionine-fed rats consumed O2 from a HEPES-containing Krebs bicarbonate solution at similar rates (92±6.9 nmol O2 · min–1 · g–1 for control, 87±5.8 for methionine-fed rats). In control hearts, bradykinin or carbachol (10–7 to 10–4 mol/L) caused concentration-dependent decreases in tissue O2 consumption. At the highest dose of each drug, the reductions were 22±1.2% and 23±2.3%, respectively. These responses were significantly inhibited in the presence of L-NAME: O2 consumption decreased by only 14±2.5% after the addition of 10–4 mol/L bradykinin and 8.4±2.4% after 10–4 mol/L carbachol. However, the effect of NO agonists was significantly less at each concentration in hearts from methionine-fed rats, and the highest concentrations of bradykinin or carbachol reduced O2 consumption by just 13±1.6% and 14±1.7% in these animals (Figures 1A and 1B). L-NAME did not significantly alter responses in the methionine-fed group.

    Effect of SNAP on O2 Consumption

    The exogenous NO donor SNAP (10–7 to 10–4 mol/L) caused concentration-dependent reductions in cardiac O2 consumption that were not significantly different between the 2 groups of rats (at highest dose, 32±1.7% for control and 28±1.7% for methionine-fed rats). These responses were not altered significantly by the presence of L-NAME.

    Measurement of Plasma Hcy

    The concentration of Hcy in rat and mouse plasma samples was assessed by immunoassay and differed significantly between the 2 groups. Hcy levels were fairly homogeneous among control rats (a mean of 6.7±0.6 μmol/L), whereas measurements for the methionine-fed group varied greatly (from 10 to 43 μmol/L) and reached a mean of 20±2.6 μmol/L. A dose-response logistic curve (SlideWrite) was used to compare the Hcy concentration of each animal and the corresponding reduction in myocardial O2 consumption after the highest concentration of bradykinin or carbachol (Figure 2A). This indicated that as plasma Hcy level increased, NO bioactivity decreased proportionally. Plasma homocysteine was also measured in wild-type and knockout mice. Plasma Hcy was 3.84±0.39 and 3.40±0.49 μmol/L in wild-type and knockout mice, respectively (n=6). In wild-type and knockout mice fed methionine, plasma Hcy was 10.85±0.92 and 10.09±1.41 μmol/L, respectively. There was no difference in plasma Hcy between wild-type and knockout mice fed methionine.

    Effect of Antioxidants on NO-Dependent Regulation of O2 Consumption

    LV tissues from rats were treated with ascorbic acid (an O2– scavenger), tempol (an SOD mimetic), or apocynin (an inhibitor of NADPH oxidase assembly), and O2 consumption by these tissues was assessed in response to increasing concentrations of bradykinin (10–7 to 10–4 mol/L). In control rats, the presence of antioxidants did not significantly alter NO bioactivity. Meanwhile, addition of these chemicals restored the depressed NO-dependent regulation of O2 metabolism in the methionine-fed group to approximately normal levels (Figure 3).

    Western Blot of Total Protein

    Overall protein concentrations, assessed by the Western blot of ;-actin, did not vary significantly between control (229±15 U of density) and methionine-fed (220±13 U of density) rats. Average protein densities between the 2 groups were also not different for eNOS, iNOS, SOD-1, SOD-2 (control versus methionine-fed: 120±5 versus 117±4 U for eNOS; 333±1 versus 333±1 U for iNOS; 130±1 versus 131±1 U for SOD-1; and 73±16 versus 66±14 U for SOD-2), and the following components of NADPH oxidase: p40phox, p47phox, p67phox, and rac-1 (Figure 4B). Although there was a statistically significant difference between the 2 groups for gp91phox (130±3 U for control and 113±3 U for methionine-fed), these differences may be too small to account for any meaningful physiological effect; however, the concentration of the p22phox subunit of NADPH oxidase (Figure 4A) was more than twice as great in methionine-fed rats (97±22 U) than in the control group (43±13 U, P<0.05). There was also a sigmoidal relationship between plasma Hcy and p22phox protein concentration (Figure 2B).

    Western Blot of Plasma Membrane Fraction

    Western blotting showed that the isolated PMF was enriched 6-fold in Na+-K+-ATPase compared with the cytosolic fraction. As shown in Figure 5, the concentration of p22phox in the PMF was significantly higher in hearts from methionine-fed rats than in control hearts, whereas gp91phox was significantly lower. There was a trend toward increased p67phox and rac-1 in the PMF of methionine-fed rats compared with control rats.

    Studies in Wild-Type and gp91phox-Knockout Mice

    There was no significant difference in blood pressure in any group of mice. For instance, systolic blood pressure was 129±2.5 mm Hg in wild-type mice, 120±3.8 mm Hg in wild-type mice fed methionine, 125±4.2 mm Hg in gp91phox-knockout mice, and 118±5.0 mm Hg in gp91phox-knockout mice fed methionine. As shown in Figure 6, bradykinin caused dose-dependent reductions in myocardial O2 consumption in normally fed wild-type mice and significantly greater reductions in normally fed gp91phox-knockout mice. Whereas methionine feeding in wild-type mice significantly impaired the response to bradykinin (at doses 10–9 through 10–5), methionine feeding had no effect on the response to bradykinin in mice lacking gp91phox. L-NAME significantly inhibited the effects of bradykinin in the normally fed wild-type mice and in both feeding groups of the knockout mice at each dose (data not shown).

    Discussion

    The major findings of this study are as follows: (1) elevated plasma concentrations of Hcy significantly inhibit the NO-dependent regulation of cardiac O2 consumption; (2) the inactivation of NO has a marked and graded relation to plasma Hcy level; (3) antioxidant treatment can restore normal regulation of cardiac O2 consumption by NO in rats with increased plasma Hcy; (4) the inactivation of NO by O2– is due to the increased assembly of NADPH oxidase after p22phox upregulation; and (5) the absence of functional gp91phox in mice prevents the impairment of NO bioactivity.

    The ability of NO to regulate myocardial O2 consumption through the inhibition of cytochrome c oxidase in mitochondria has been well established by our laboratory and others.9–11 Although the release of NO is small under basal conditions because of the lack of agonists and flow, the presence of an agonist causes dose-dependent reductions in tissue O2 consumption, an effect that can be inhibited by L-NAME. The present results demonstrate that this important regulatory mechanism is impaired in mice and rats with elevated plasma Hcy concentrations. Whereas baseline O2 consumption was not significantly different between control and methionine-fed groups, responses to bradykinin or carbachol were greatly diminished in LVs from methionine-fed rats (by 40% at the highest dose of each drug), which suggests reduced NO bioavailability. These data are in accordance with studies showing decreased NO-dependent vasodilation in HHcy.17,18 Moreover, a recent study by Zylberstein et al24 found that elevated plasma Hcy correlated with an increased risk of myocardial infarction and consequent mortality in women over a 24-year period. By focusing on myocardial metabolism rather than vessel dysfunction, the present study offers a link between the previously reported inactivation of NO in HHcy and the cardiac tissue damage suggested by Zylberstein et al.24

    All rats in the experimental group were fed methionine similarly, but the subsequent increase in plasma Hcy level varied greatly. This variability allowed us to study, over a wide range of values, the correlation between Hcy concentration and the ability of bradykinin or carbachol to reduce myocardial O2 consumption. The relationship between increased plasma Hcy and decreased NO bioactivity was graded and formed a sigmoidal curve (Figure 2A). For the most part, responses to the NO agonists in rats began to decrease at Hcy concentrations between 10 and 15 μmol/L, a range that interestingly is quite similar to what is considered a risk factor in humans (ie, the American Heart Association recommends a therapeutic goal of <10 μmol/L). Plasma Hcy increased almost 3-fold during methionine feeding in both the wild-type and knockout mouse, reaching 10 μmol/L, and these values were not statistically different.

    Despite altered NO bioactivity in rats and wild-type mice with high levels of plasma Hcy, hemodynamic measurements (including blood pressure, heart rate, LV dimensions, wall thickness, ejection fraction, and fractional shortening) revealed little difference between control and methionine-fed animals. This strongly suggests that the changes observed in the NO-mediated regulation of O2 consumption were due to the direct effects of HHcy rather than to the onset of hypertension or heart failure. However, the striking similarity in blood pressure between the 2 groups is somewhat surprising given the low bioavailability of NO in HHcy. Whereas comparable NO inhibition by L-NAME would be sufficient to make rats hypertensive, this was not observed in rats fed methionine. One possible explanation is that the rats and mice were fed methionine for only 5 to 9 weeks and thus experienced HHcy for a very short period of time. At the same time, even some large-scale clinical trials have suggested that high plasma Hcy, although a risk factor for many cardiovascular diseases, is not a strong predictor of hypertension in humans.25 Clearly, this is a subject that requires further investigation.

    Bradykinin (a B2 kinin receptor agonist) or carbachol (a muscarinic 2 receptor agonist) both stimulate the endogenous release of NO by activating eNOS through different mechanisms. Thus, L-NAME significantly impaired the regulation of O2 consumption by these agonists in hearts from control rats. However, the present data suggest that the reduced NO bioactivity observed in HHcy is not caused by a decrease in eNOS activity or a loss of sensitivity to NO in mitochondria. Western blotting revealed that eNOS protein is preserved, not depressed, in rats with high plasma Hcy. Moreover, the exogenous NO donor SNAP reduced myocardial O2 consumption to an extent that was not different between control and methionine-fed rats. It is therefore unlikely that the differences between the 2 groups observed with bradykinin or carbachol were due to decreased binding sites for NO in mitochondria.

    Previous authors have suggested that NO bioactivity is impaired in HHcy because of increased oxidant stress.18–20 In line with these findings, incubation with antioxidants (including ascorbic acid, which directly scavenges O2–, or tempol, an SOD mimetic) significantly enhanced the NO-dependent regulation of O2 consumption in rats with high plasma Hcy, restoring it to control levels at each dose of bradykinin. Such restoration of NO bioactivity also occurred when tissues were pretreated with apocynin, which specifically inhibits NADPH oxidase by blocking the association of p47phox and p67phox with the membrane-bound complex.26 Because the 3 antioxidants had no significant effect on responses in control tissues, these results strongly support the conclusion that elevated O2– levels occur in rats with increased plasma Hcy concentrations.

    To clarify a mechanism behind the increased production of reactive oxygen species, Western blotting was used to assess the effect of HHcy on the expression of various proteins involved in the production and destruction of the O2– radical. Both SOD-1 and SOD-2 were present at normal levels in hearts from methionine-fed rats, even though tempol was able to improve NO bioactivity in these same animals. This suggests that whereas addition of a chemical that mimics SOD was able to lower O2– levels, a deficiency in this enzyme was not responsible for the increased O2– associated with high plasma Hcy. Instead, enhanced free radical generation is more likely a result of upregulated NADPH oxidase, as suggested by previous studies19,20 and the fact that apocynin improved the regulation of O2 consumption by bradykinin. This notion was further supported by Western blotting, which revealed that the p22phox subunit of the enzyme was present at a concentration 2-fold greater in hearts from methionine-fed rats than in control hearts. Furthermore, this increase in p22phox correlated with increasing plasma Hcy in a sigmoidal relationship (Figure 2B).

    Although these findings point to upregulated NADPH oxidase in HHcy, we were surprised to discover that only 1 subunit (p22phox) was present at higher levels in hearts from methionine-fed rats. We therefore investigated whether the increase in p22phox was sufficient to cause the oxidase to assemble in the plasma membrane (and thus produce O2–) more often. In fact, Western blots with the isolated PMF not only confirmed the increase in p22phox in hearts from methionine-fed rats but also indicated that greater amounts of p67phox (a cytosolic component) and rac-1 (a GTP-binding protein) had translocated to the membrane. This suggests that NADPH oxidase assembly increases in HHcy, even if many of the subunits do not increase in quantity. And although previous authors have suggested that HHcy also upregulates iNOS19 and uncouples NO synthase20 in vascular tissues, the complete restoration of NO bioactivity in the presence of apocynin and the lack of upregulation of eNOS and iNOS in hearts from methionine-fed rats makes it unlikely that NO synthase–derived O2– is a major cause of NO inactivation in cardiomyocytes.

    The role of NADPH oxidase in HHcy was further supported by studies in genetically modified mice lacking a functional gp91phox subunit. Methionine-feeding for 9 weeks did not alter the ability of bradykinin to reduce myocardial O2 consumption in these animals, which suggests that the impaired NO bioactivity in HHcy is due to increased activity of a gp91phox-containing NADPH oxidase. This form of the oxidase is expressed in endothelial cells, fibroblasts, and cardiomyocytes but not in vascular smooth muscle cells, in which most NADPH oxidase-derived O2– production involves other NOX proteins (gp91phox homologues).27,28 Interestingly, the responses to bradykinin in both groups of the gp91phox-knockout mice were greater than responses in normally fed wild-type mice, which indicates that even in a normal mouse, a small amount of NO is still inactivated by O2–.

    To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first to demonstrate that HHcy impairs the regulation of cardiac O2 consumption by NO and that this effect is proportional to plasma Hcy level. These findings suggest that one reason why plasma Hcy is a graded risk factor for cardiovascular disease may be the varying extent to which NO is inactivated and unable to fulfill its role in controlling cardiovascular homeostasis. Moreover, this study is the first to demonstrate upregulated p22phox and increased translocation of p67phox and rac-1 to the membrane in HHcy as a cause of elevated NADPH oxidase activity, an event that requires the participation of gp91phox. These results indicate that the inactivation of NO by NADPH oxidase-derived O2– has a major impact on cardiac metabolism beyond that caused by impaired vasodilation.

    Acknowledgments

    This work was supported by the following NIH grants: PO-1 HL 43023, RO-1 HL 50142 and 61290, and HL 46813 (Dr Koller). Justin S. Becker and Aaron Schneeberger were summer interns from Hendrick Hudson High School, Montrose, NY; Alexandra Adler was a summer intern from Yale University.

    References

    McCully KS. Vascular pathology of homocysteinemia: implications for the development of arteriosclerosis. Am J Pathol. 1969; 56: 111–128.

    Clarke R, Daly L, Robinson K, Naughten E, Cahalane S, Fowler B, Graham I. Hyperhomocysteinemia: an independent risk factor for vascular disease. N Engl J Med. 1991; 324: 1149–1155.

    Boushey CJ, Beresford SA, Omenn GS, Motulsky AG. A quantitative assessment of plasma homocysteine as a risk factor for vascular disease: probable benefits of increasing folic acid intakes. JAMA. 1995; 274: 1049–1057.

    Nyg;rd O, Nordrehaug JE, Refsum H, Ueland PM, Farstad M, Vollset SE. Plasma homocysteine levels and mortality in patients with coronary artery disease. N Engl J Med. 1997; 337: 230–237.

    Cheng SW, Ting AC, Wong J. Fasting total plasma homocysteine and atherosclerotic peripheral vascular disease. Ann Vasc Surg. 1997; 11: 217–223.

    den Heijer M, Koster T, Blom HJ, Bos GM, Briet E, Reitsma PH, Vandenbroucke JP, Rosendaal FR. Hyperhomocysteinemia as a risk factor for deep-vein thrombosis. N Engl J Med. 1996; 334: 759–762.

    Stampfer MJ, Malinow MR, Willett WC, Newcomer LM, Upson B, Ullmann D, Tishler PV, Hennekens CH. A prospective study of plasma homocyst(e)ine and risk of myocardial infarction in US physicians. JAMA. 1992; 268: 877–881.

    Parnetti L, Caso V, Santucci A, Corea F, Lanari A, Floridi A, Conte C, Bottiglieri T. Mild hyperhomocysteinemia is a risk-factor in all etiological subtypes of stroke. Neurol Sci. 2004; 25: 13–17.

    Cleeter MW, Cooper JM, Darley-Usmar VM, Moncada S, Schapira AH. Reversible inhibition of cytochrome c oxidase, the terminal enzyme of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, by nitric oxide: implications for neurodegenerative diseases. FEBS Lett. 1994; 345: 50–54.

    Loke KE, McConnell PI, Tuzman JM, Shesely EG, Smith CJ, Stackpole CJ, Thompson CI, Kaley G, Wolin MS, Hintze TH. Endogenous endothelial nitric oxide synthase-derived nitric oxide is a physiological regulator of myocardial oxygen consumption. Circ Res. 1999; 84: 840–845.

    Trochu JN, Bouhour JB, Kaley G, Hintze TH. Role of endothelium-derived nitric oxide in the regulation of cardiac oxygen metabolism: implications in health and disease. Circ Res. 2000; 87: 1108–1117.

    Cai H, Harrison DG. Endothelial dysfunction in cardiovascular diseases: the role of oxidant stress. Circ Res. 2000; 87: 840–844.

    Arimura K, Egashira K, Nakamura R, Ide T, Tsutsui H, Shimokawa H, Takeshita A. Increased inactivation of nitric oxide is involved in coronary endothelial dysfunction in heart failure. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2001; 280: H68–H75.

    Hamilton CA, Brosnan MJ, McIntyre M, Graham D, Dominiczak AF. Superoxide excess in hypertension and aging: a common cause of endothelial dysfunction. Hypertension. 2001; 37: 529–534.

    MacCarthy PA, Grieve DJ, Li JM, Dunster C, Kelly FJ, Shah AM. Impaired endothelial regulation of ventricular relaxation in cardiac hypertrophy: role of reactive oxygen species and NADPH oxidase. Circulation. 2001; 104: 2967–2974.

    Babior BM. NADPH oxidase: an update. Blood. 1999; 93: 1464–1476.

    Ungvari Z, Pacher P, Rischak K, Szollar L, Koller A. Dysfunction of nitric oxide mediation in isolated rat arterioles with methionine diet-induced hyperhomocysteinemia. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 1999; 19: 1899–1904.

    Eberhardt RT, Forgione MA, Cap A, Leopold JA, Rudd MA, Trolliet M, Heydrick S, Stark R, Klings ES, Moldovan NI, Yaghoubi M, Goldschmidt-Clermont PJ, Farber HW, Cohen R, Loscalzo J. Endothelial dysfunction in a murine model of mild hyperhomocyst(e)inemia. J Clin Invest. 2000; 106: 483–491.

    Ungvari Z, Csiszar A, Edwards JG, Kaminski PM, Wolin MS, Kaley G, Koller A. Increased superoxide production in coronary arteries in hyperhomocysteinemia: role of tumor necrosis factor-alpha, NAD(P)H oxidase, and inducible nitric oxide synthase. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol. 2003; 23: 418–424.

    Dayal S, Arning E, Bottiglieri T, Boger RH, Sigmund CD, Faraci FM, Lentz SR. Cerebral vascular dysfunction mediated by superoxide in hyperhomocysteinemic mice. Stroke. 2004; 35: 1957–1962.

    Schachinger V, Britten MB, Zeiher AM. Prognostic impact of coronary vasodilator dysfunction on adverse long-term outcome of coronary heart disease. Circulation. 2000; 101: 1899–1906.

    Pollock JD, Williams DA, Gifford MA, Li LL, Du X, Fisherman J, Orkin SH, Doerschuk CM, Dinauer MC. Mouse model of X-linked chronic granulomatous disease, an inherited defect in phagocyte superoxide production. Nat Genet. 1995; 9: 202–209.

    Lei B, Lionetti V, Young ME, Chandler MP, d’Agostino C, Kang E, Altarejos M, Matsuo K, Hintze TH, Stanley WC, Recchia FA. Paradoxical downregulation of the glucose oxidation pathway despite enhanced flux in severe heart failure. J Mol Cell Cardiol. 2004; 36: 567–576.

    Zylberstein DE, Bengtsson C, Bjorkelund C, Landaas S, Sundh V, Thelle D, Lissner L. Serum homocysteine in relation to mortality and morbidity from coronary heart disease: a 24-year follow-up of the population study of women in Gothenburg. Circulation. 2004; 109: 601–606.

    Sundstrom J, Sullivan L, D’Agostino RB, Jacques PF, Selhub J, Rosenberg IH, Wilson PW, Levy D, Vasan RS. Plasma homocysteine, hypertension incidence, and blood pressure tracking: the Framingham Heart Study. Hypertension. 2003; 42: 1100–1105.

    Meyer JW, Holland JA, Ziegler LM, Chang MM, Beebe G, Schmitt ME. Identification of a functional leukocyte-type NADPH oxidase in human endothelial cells: a potential atherogenic source of reactive oxygen species. Endothelium. 1999; 7: 11–22.

    Chamseddine AH, Miller FJ Jr. Gp91phox contributes to NADPH oxidase activity in aortic fibroblasts but not smooth muscle cells. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2003; 285: H2284–H2289.

    Li JM, Gall NP, Grieve DJ, Chen M, Shah AM. Activation of NADPH oxidase during progression of cardiac hypertrophy to failure. Hypertension. 2002; 40: 477–484.(Justin S. Becker; Alexand)