Neuregulins Promote Survival and Growth of Cardiac Myocytes

PERSISTENCE OF ErbB2 AND ErbB4 EXPRESSION IN NEONATAL AND ADULT VENTRICULAR MYOCYTES*

  1. Ralph A. Kelly
  1. From the Cardiovascular Division, Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115 and Cambridge NeuroScience Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139

Abstract

Neuregulins (i.e. neuregulin-1 (NRG1), also called neu differentiation factor, heregulin, glial growth factor, and acetylcholine receptor-inducing activity) are known to induce growth and differentiation of epithelial, glial, neuronal, and skeletal muscle cells. Unexpectedly, mice with loss of function mutations of NRG1 or of either of two of their cognate receptors, ErbB2 and ErbB4, die during midembryogenesis due to the aborted development of myocardial trabeculae in ventricular muscle. To examine the role of NRG and their receptors in developing and postnatal myocardium, we studied the ability of a soluble NRG1 (recombinant human glial growth factor 2) to promote proliferation, survival, and growth of isolated neonatal and adult rat cardiac myocytes. Both ErbB2 and ErbB4 receptors were found to be expressed by neonatal and adult ventricular myocytes and activated by rhGGF2. rhGGF2 (30 ng/ml) provoked an approximate 2-fold increase in embryonic cardiac myocyte proliferation. rhGGF2 also promoted survival and inhibited apoptosis of subconfluent, serum-deprived myocyte primary cultures and also induced hypertrophic growth in both neonatal and adult ventricular myocytes, which was accompanied by enhanced expression of prepro-atrial natriuretic factor and skeletal α-actin. Moreover, NRG1 mRNA could be detected in coronary microvascular endothelial cell primary cultures prepared from adult rat ventricular muscle. NRG1 expression in these cells was increased by endothelin-1, another locally acting cardiotropic peptide within the heart. The persistent expression of both a neuregulin and its cognate receptors in the postnatal and adult heart suggests a continuing role for neuregulins in the myocardial adaption to physiologic stress or injury.

Footnotes

  • * This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant HL36141 (to R. A. K.).The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

  • These two authors contributed equally to this work.

  • § Present address: Cardiology Division, Boston University Medical Center, 88 E. Newton St., Boston, MA 02118.

  • To whom correspondence should be addressed: Cardiology Division, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, 75 Francis St., Boston, MA 02115. Tel.: 617-732-7503; Fax: 617-732-5132; E-mail:rakelly{at}bics.bwh.harvard.edu.

  • Received October 28, 1997.
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