Atrial Chamber-specific Expression of Sarcolipin Is Regulated during Development and Hypertrophic Remodeling

2003 
Abstract Intracellular Ca2+ regulation is critical in the normal cardiac function and development of pathologic hearts. Phospholamban, an endogenous inhibitor of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase in the sarcoplasmic reticulum, plays an important role in Ca2+ cycling in heart. Recently, sarcolipin has been identified as having a similar function as phospholamban in skeletal muscle. Because phospholamban is differentially expressed in atrial and ventricular myocardia and its expression is often altered in diseased hearts, we investigated the cardiac chamber specificity of sarcolipin expression and its regulation during development and hypertrophic remodeling. Northern blot analysis revealed that the expression of mouse sarcolipin mRNA was most abundant in the atria and was undetectable in the ventricles, indicating an atrial chamber-specific expression pattern. Atrial chamber-specific expression of sarcolipin mRNA was increased during development. These findings were confirmed by in situhybridization studies. In addition, sarcolipin expression was down-regulated in the atria of hypertrophic heart when induced by ventricular specific overexpression of the activated H-ras gene. In humans, sarcolipin mRNA was also expressed in the atria but not detected in the ventricles, although sarcolipin expression was most abundant in skeletal muscle. Taken together, sarcolipin is likely to be an atrial chamber-specific regulator of Ca2+ cycling in heart.
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