1. Academic Validation
  2. Specific beta(2)AR blocker ICI 118,551 actively decreases contraction through a G(i)-coupled form of the beta(2)AR in myocytes from failing human heart

Specific beta(2)AR blocker ICI 118,551 actively decreases contraction through a G(i)-coupled form of the beta(2)AR in myocytes from failing human heart

  • Circulation. 2002 May 28;105(21):2497-503. doi: 10.1161/01.cir.0000017187.61348.95.
Haibin Gong 1 Hong Sun Walter J Koch Thomas Rau Thomas Eschenhagen Ursula Ravens Jürgen F Heubach Dawn L Adamson Sian E Harding
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 National Heart and Lung Institute, Imperial College School of Medicine, London, UK.
Abstract

Background: We have observed direct (noncatecholamine-blocking) negative inotropic effects of the selective beta(2)-adrenoceptor (AR) antagonist ICI 118,551 in myocytes from failing human ventricle. In this study we characterize the effect in parallel in human myocytes and in myocytes from animal models where beta(2)ARs or G(i) proteins are overexpressed.

Methods and results: Enzymatically isolated, superfused ventricular myocytes were exposed to betaAR agonists and antagonists/inverse agonists, and contraction amplitude was measured. ICI 118,551 decreased contraction in ventricular myocytes from failing human hearts by 45.3+/-4.1% (n=20 hearts/31 myocytes, P<0.001) but had little effect in nonfailing hearts (4.9+/-4%, n=5 myocytes/3 hearts). Effects were significantly larger in patients classified as end-stage. Transgenic mice with high beta(2)AR number and increased G(i) levels had normal basal contractility but showed a similar negative inotropic response to ICI 118,551. Overexpression of human beta(2)AR in rabbit myocytes using adenovirus potentiated the negative inotropic effect of ICI 118,551. In human, rabbit, and mouse myocytes, the negative inotropic effects were blocked after treatment of cells with pertussis toxin to inactivate G(i), and overexpression of G(i)alpha(2) induced the effect de novo in normal rat myocytes.

Conclusions: We hypothesize that ICI 118,551 binding directs the beta(2)AR to a G(i)-coupled form and away from the G(s)-coupled form (ligand-directed trafficking). ICI 118,551 effectively acts as an agonist at the G(i)-coupled beta(2)AR, producing a direct negative inotropic effect. Conditions where beta(2)ARs are present and G(i) is raised (failing human heart, TGbeta(2) mouse heart) predispose to the appearance of the negative inotropic effect.

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