A background Ca 2+ entry pathway mediated by TRPC1/TRPC4 is critical for development of pathological cardiac remodelling

Juan E., Camacho Londoño, Qinghai, Tian, Karin, Hammer, Laura, Schröder, Julia, Camacho Londoño, Jan C., Reil, Tao, He, Martin, Oberhofer, Stefanie, Mannebach, Ilka, Mathar, Stephan E., Philipp, Wiebke, Tabellion, Frank, Schweda, Alexander, Dietrich, Lars, Kaestner, Ulrich, Laufs, Lutz, Birnbaumer, Veit, Flockerzi, Marc, Freichel, Peter, Lipp

European Heart Journal |

Aims: Pathological cardiac hypertrophy is a major predictor for the development of cardiac diseases. It is associated with chronic neurohumoral stimulation and with altered cardiac Ca2+ signalling in cardiomyocytes. TRPC proteins form agonist-induced cation channels, but their functional role for Ca2+ homeostasis in cardiomyocytes during fast cytosolic Ca2+ cycling and neurohumoral stimulation leading to hypertrophy is unknown. Methods: In a systematic analysis of multiple knockout mice using fluorescence imaging of electrically paced adult ventricular car- and results diomyocytes and Mn2+-quench microfluorimetry, we identified a background Ca2+ entry (BGCE) pathway that critic- ally depends on TRPC1/C4 proteins but not others such as TRPC3/C6. Reduction of BGCE in TRPC1/C4-deficient cardiomyocytes lowers diastolic and systolic Ca2+ concentrations both, under basal conditions and under neurohu- moral stimulation without affecting cardiac contractility measured in isolated hearts and in vivo. Neurohumoral-induced cardiac hypertrophy as well as the expression of foetal genes (ANP, BNP) and genes regulated by Ca2+-dependent sig- nalling (RCAN1-4, myomaxin)was reduced in TRPC1/C4 knockout (DKO), but not in TRPC1- or TRPC4-single knock- out mice. Pressure overload-induced hypertrophy and interstitial fibrosis were both ameliorated in TRPC1/C4-DKO mice, whereas they did not show alterations in other cardiovascular parameters contributing to systemic neurohumoral- induced hypertrophy such as renin secretion and blood pressure. Conclusions: The constitutively active TRPC1/C4-dependent BGCE fine-tunes Ca2+ cycling in beating adult cardiomyocytes. TRPC1/C4-gene inactivation protects against development of maladaptive cardiac remodelling without altering cardiac or extracardiac functions contributing to this pathogenesis.