Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2191816 Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology 2007 8 Pages PDF
Abstract
Cardioprotective bradykinin type-2 receptors (BK-2Rs) are downregulated in the myocardial endothelium of both human and rat failing hearts. Statins are cardioprotective drugs that reduce the level of plasma cholesterol but also exert cholesterol-independent pleiotropic effects. Here we examined the effect of lovastatin on BK-2R expression in cultured human coronary artery endothelial cells. The effect of lovastatin on the expression of BK receptors in human coronary artery endothelial cells (HCAECs) was examined by real-time PCR, Western blot analysis and immunocytochemistry. Lovastatin induced a time- and concentration-dependent increase in both BK-2R and BK-1R mRNA expression in the cultured HCAECs. Also, the number of functional BK-2Rs capable of inducing BK-mediated NO production and cGMP signaling was increased in the lovastatin-treated HCAECs. Mevalonate, the direct metabolite of HMG-CoA reductase, reversed the effect of lovastatin. Furthermore, lovastatin inhibited Rho activation and a selective inhibitor of Rho-associated kinases, Y-27632, induced a similar increase in BK-2R expression as lovastatin. In contrast, a specific inhibitor of COX-2, NS398, significantly inhibited the lovastatin-induced expression of BK-2Rs. Here we show for the first time that lovastatin induces the expression of BK-2Rs in cultured human coronary artery endothelial cells through a novel cholesterol-independent pleiotropic mechanism that involves RhoA kinase inhibition and COX-2 activation. Thus, reported beneficial effects of statins in cardiovascular diseases may be partly mediated by an increased expression of cardioprotective BK-2Rs in the endothelial cells of the coronary tree. Moreover, the use of COX-2 inhibitors may affect the level of endothelial BK-2Rs in a negative fashion.
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