Suppression of atrial natriuretic peptide/natriuretic peptide receptor-A-mediated signaling upregulates angiotensin-II-induced collagen synthesis in adult cardiac fibroblasts

2013 
Cardiac hormone atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) and its receptor natriuretic peptide receptor-A (NPR-A) system acts as an intrinsic negative regulator of abnormal extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling in the heart. However, the underlying mechanism by which ANP/NPR-A system opposes the ECM remodeling in the diseased heart is not well understood. Here, we investigated the anti-fibrotic mechanism of ANP/NPR-A in fibrotic agonist Angiotensin- II (ANG II)-treated adult cardiac fibroblast (CF) cells. Normal and NPR-A-suppressed adult CF cells were treated with ANG II (10−7 M) in the presence and absence of ANP (10−8 M) for 24 h. Total collagen concentration, activity and expression of MMP-2 and MMP-9, and nuclear translocation of Nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-κB-p50) were studied. NPR-A-suppressed adult CF cells exhibited a more pronounced increase in collagen production, ROS generation, and NF-κB-p50 nuclear translocation as compared to adult CF cells treated with agonist alone. ANP co-treatment significantly reverses the agonist-induced above changes in normal adult CF cells, while it failed to reverse the agonist-induced collagen synthesis in the NPR-A-suppressed adult CF cells. The cGMP analog (8-bromo-cGMP) treatment significantly attenuated the agonist-induced collagen synthesis both in normal and NPR-A-suppressed adult cells. The results of this study suggest that ANP/NPR-A signaling system antagonizes the agonist-induced collagen synthesis via suppressing the activities of MMP-2, MMP-9, ROS generation, and NF-κB nuclear translocation mechanism.
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