cGMP-hydrolytic activity and its inhibition by sildenafil in normal and failing human and mouse myocardium

F Vandeput, J Krall, R Ockaili, FN Salloum… - … of Pharmacology and …, 2009 - ASPET
F Vandeput, J Krall, R Ockaili, FN Salloum, V Florio, JD Corbin, SH Francis, RC Kukreja
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, 2009ASPET
In mouse models of cardiac disease, the type 5 (PDE5)-selective cyclic nucleotide
phosphodiesterase inhibitor sildenafil has antihypertrophic and cardioprotective effects
attributable to the inhibition of cGMP hydrolysis. To investigate the relevance of these
findings to humans, we quantified cGMP-hydrolytic activity and its inhibition by sildenafil in
cytosolic and microsomal preparations from the left ventricular myocardium of normal and
failing human hearts. The vast majority of cGMP-hydrolytic activity was attributable to PDE1 …
In mouse models of cardiac disease, the type 5 (PDE5)-selective cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase inhibitor sildenafil has antihypertrophic and cardioprotective effects attributable to the inhibition of cGMP hydrolysis. To investigate the relevance of these findings to humans, we quantified cGMP-hydrolytic activity and its inhibition by sildenafil in cytosolic and microsomal preparations from the left ventricular myocardium of normal and failing human hearts. The vast majority of cGMP-hydrolytic activity was attributable to PDE1 and PDE3. Sildenafil had no measurable effect on cGMP hydrolysis at 10 nM, at which it is selective for PDE5, but it had a marked effect on cGMP and cAMP hydrolysis at 1 μM, at which it inhibits PDE1. In contrast, in preparations from the left ventricles of normal mice and mice with heart failure resulting from coronary artery ligation, the effects of sildenafil on cGMP hydrolysis were attributable to inhibition of both PDE5 and PDE1; PDE5 comprised ∼22 and ∼43% of the cytosolic cGMP-hydrolytic activity in preparations from normal and failing mouse hearts, respectively. These differences in PDE5 activities in human and mouse hearts call into question the extent to which the effects of sildenafil in mouse models are likely to be applicable in humans and raise the possibility of PDE1 as an alternative therapeutic target.
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