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Copyright © 2001, The National Academy of Sciences Medical Sciences Cardiovascular abnormalities with normal blood pressure in tissue
kallikrein-deficient mice *Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM) U367, 17 Rue du Fer à Moulin, 75005 Paris, France; ‡Faculté de Médecine Necker-Enfants Malades, Université Paris V, 156 Rue de Vaugirard, 75015 Paris, France; §Aventis, Disease Group Cardiovascular, Building H821, 65926 Frankfurt a.M., Germany; ¶INSERM U541, 41 Boulevard de la Chapelle, 75010 Paris, France; ‖Division of Hypertension, Hôpital Universitaire, CH-1011 Lausanne, Switzerland; **INSERM U400, Faculté de Médecine, 8 Rue du Général Sarrail, 94000 Créteil, France; ‡‡INSERM U36, 3 Rue d'Ulm, 75005 Paris, France; ††INSERM U430, Hôpital Broussais, 96 Rue Didot, 75014 Paris, France; and §§Department of Molecular Genetics, Biochemistry, and Microbiology, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, OH 45267-0524 †To whom reprint requests should be addressed. E-mail:
pmeneton/at/infobiogen.fr. Communicated by Derek A. Denton, University of Melbourne,
Parkville, Australia Received November 5, 2000; Accepted December 26, 2000. This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.Abstract Tissue kallikrein is a serine protease thought to be involved in
the generation of bioactive peptide kinins in many organs like the
kidneys, colon, salivary glands, pancreas, and blood vessels. Low renal
synthesis and urinary excretion of tissue kallikrein have been
repeatedly linked to hypertension in animals and humans, but the exact
role of the protease in cardiovascular function has not been
established largely because of the lack of specific inhibitors. This
study demonstrates that mice lacking tissue kallikrein are unable to
generate significant levels of kinins in most tissues and develop
cardiovascular abnormalities early in adulthood despite normal blood
pressure. The heart exhibits septum and posterior wall thinning and a
tendency to dilatation resulting in reduced left ventricular mass.
Cardiac function estimated in vivo and in
vitro is decreased both under basal conditions and in response
to βadrenergic stimulation. Furthermore, flow-induced
vasodilatation is impaired in isolated perfused carotid arteries, which
express, like the heart, low levels of the protease. These data show
that tissue kallikrein is the main kinin-generating enzyme in
vivo and that a functional kallikrein–kinin system is
necessary for normal cardiac and arterial function in the mouse. They
suggest that the kallikrein–kinin system could be involved in the
development or progression of cardiovascular diseases. Various endocrine, paracrine,
and neuronal peptide systems control blood pressure and cardiovascular
function. Active kinins are liberated from kininogens after cleavage by
proteases and bind locally to two types of receptors, B1 and B2, which
are involved in various functions including vasodilatation, ion
epithelial transport, smooth muscle contraction, cell proliferation,
and nociception (1, 2). From a cardiovascular viewpoint, the
kallikrein–kinin system is thought to antagonize the effects of
the renin–angiotensin system. The functional coupling between the
two systems is illustrated by the angiotensin Iconverting enzyme
whose two active sites are able to generate angiotensin II from
angiotensin I and to degrade kinins into inactive peptides (3). This
tight coupling has precluded a clear demonstration whether the
antihypertensive and cardioprotective effects of angiotensin
I-converting enzyme inhibitors are solely related to the inhibition of
angiotensin II production or also to the inhibition of kinin
degradation (4). In addition to tissue kallikrein, many proteases including plasma
kallikrein, trypsin, plasmin, cathepsins, calpains, and some serine
proteases encoded by the tissue kallikrein gene family have been shown
to be able to generate kinins in vitro (5–8). However, the
physiologically relevant kinin-forming enzymes have not been clearly
established in vivo largely because of the lack of specific
inhibitors. Several arguments suggest that tissue kallikrein may play
an important role. The expression of the gene depends highly on
environmental factors such as potassium and sodium dietary intakes
(9–12), which are known to have important cardiovascular and blood
pressure effects. Low urinary excretion levels of tissue kallikrein
have been linked to the risk of developing hypertension in both humans
and rodents (13–16). In addition, mice and hypertensive rats
chronically or transiently overexpressing the human tissue kallikrein
gene present hypotension (17–19). Tissue-kallikrein-deficient mice
were created to investigate directly the role of the protease in
vivo. The lack of tissue kallikrein abolishes the kinin-forming
capacity in most tissues and induces cardiac and vascular
abnormalities, with no change in blood pressure. Materials and Methods Generation of Tissue Kallikrein-Deficient Mice. The targeting vector was constructed by using two mKlk1 gene fragments
of 1.4 kb (EcoRI-SacI) and 2 kb
(BsgI-HindIII) isolated from a mouse 129/Sv
phage library (20). The neomycin-resistance gene, replacing a region of
100 bp (SacI-BsgI) in exon 4, was used for
selecting R1 embryonic stem cells together with the herpes simplex
virus/thymidine kinase gene that was linked to the extremity of the
2-kb genomic fragment. Electroporation and selection of embryonic stem
cells and blastocyst-mediated transgenesis were performed as described
previously (21). The PCR primers used for the diagnostic analyses of
targeted embryonic stem cell clones and for the genotyping of mice were
in intron 3 (5′-TGGGTCTTCTCCAAGCAACAGAGAG-3′), intron 4
(5′-GAAGGATGCAAAGAGCCTGCCTAGC-3′), and the neomycin-resistance gene
(5′-GCATGCTCCAGACTGCCTTG-3′). Northern Blot, Reverse Transcription (RT)-PCR, and
Immunohistochemistry. Total RNA and Northern blots were prepared by conventional methods (22)
and hybridized with a 0.4-kb tissue kallikrein cDNA probe spanning
nucleotides 159–549. RT-PCR (annealing temperature 68°C; 35 cycles)
was performed with primers situated in exon 2
(5′-GCTTCACCAAATATCAATGTGGGGGTATC-3′) and exon 4
(5′-CACACTGGAGCTCATCTGGGTATTCAT-3′) for mKlk1, and with primers
located in exon 4 (5′-CATATACGAACCCGCAGATGATCTCCAGTG-3′) and
exon 5 (5′-CTTTTATCCAAGAGTTAAACTTAATAAGTTTG-3′) for mKlk5. The organs
were perfused in vivo with paraformaldehyde before paraffin
embedding and immunostaining with an anti-rat tissue kallikrein
antibody (23), which was revealed by immunoperoxidase detection
(biotinylated anti-rabbit IgG and ABC complex; Vector
Laboratories). Kinin-Forming Activity and Bradykinin Assays. Tissue kallikrein activity was assessed by measuring the generation of
kinins with an RIA after incubation with an excess of semipurified
bovine kininogen (24). Tissues first were perfused with modified
Hank's solution, homogenized in Tris HCl buffer (pH 8.5), and
solubilized with 1% (mass/vol) deoxycholic acid. Urine and feces
were collected by using individual metabolic cages (Marty Technologie,
Marcilly-Sur-Eure, France) over 24-h periods, and the feces were
homogenized in 0.75 M nitric acid. Endogenous bradykinin
was measured by RIA after tissue homogenization in ethanol, subsequent
solid-phase extraction on phenylsilylsilica, followed by isocratic
reversed-phase HPLC on dodecylsilylsilica using methanol/0.1%
phosphoric acid as a mobile phase (25).Blood Pressure and Heart Rate Measurements. Nonanaesthetized mice, warmed at 30°C, were trained daily for 1 week
for restrainers and tail-cuff inflation. Systolic blood pressure and
heart rate then were recorded daily (20 determinations in a row) over a
2-day period by using a PowerLab/S system connected to
chart software (A. D. Instruments, Milford, MA). Each
determination was individually examined before being included in the
final data set. Morphometric and Histological Analyzes. Hearts were arrested at diastole by injection of potassium chloride and
fixed by perfusion at diastolic pressure with 5% (vol/vol) formalin
and 0.1 mg/ml sodium nitroprusside and by overnight immersion in 10%
(vol/vol) formalin. For each heart, two transversal sections 5-μm
thick encompassing the whole left ventricle were cut, embedded in
paraffin, and stained with hematoxylin/eosin for histological
analysis. For morphometric measurements, each section was stained with
Sirius red and scanned with a calibration of 15 μm per pixel (Sony 3
charge-coupled device camera). Left ventricular dimensions were
determined with an image analyzer (Nachet NS 15000, Nachet-Vision, les
Ulis, France; ref. 26). For each parameter, the final values were the
mean of the values measured on the two sections. Echocardiography. Transthoracic measurements were performed on anaesthetized mice
(ketamine/xylazine). We used a Sequoia ultrasound device (Acuson,
Mountain View, CA) equipped with a specifically designed 13–15 MHz
short-focus linear array probe (15L8; ref. 27). Two-dimensional guided
M-mode images were obtained perpendicular to the ventricular septum and
posterior wall at the tip of the mitral valve leaflets. End diastolic
and systolic left ventricular (LV) diameter as well as septum and
posterior wall thickness were measured by using the American
Society of Echocardiography leading-edge method. From these
parameters, fractional shortening was calculated as [(LV
diameterdiastole − LV
diametersystole)/LV
diameterdiastole] × 100 and left ventricular
mass as [(septum thicknessdiastole + LV
diameterdiastole + LV posterior wall
thicknessdiastole)3 − (LV
diameterdiastole)3]
× 1.04. Assessment of Left Ventricular Function in Vivo. Anaesthetized mice (thiopental/ketamine) were intubated and
ventilated (Hugo Sachs Elektronics, Frieburg, Germany) with a 1:1
mixture of oxygen and room air, and a tidal volume of 10 μl/g of
body weight at 140 breaths per min. The left ventricle was catheterized
through the right carotid artery by using a miniaturized impedance
catheter (Millar Instruments, Houston, TX) to measure simultaneous
pressure–volume relationship (28). For absolute volume measurements,
the catheter was calibrated with known volumes of heparin-treated mouse
blood, using special calibration tubes. Calibrated values were
corrected by subtraction of the parallel conductance (conductance of
surrounding structures of the cavity) measured by hypertonic injection
[10 μl of 15% (vol/vol) saline] into the external jugular vein.
The calibration factor used to compensate for nonuniform intracardiac
electric field was set at 1. Pressure–volume signals were measured at
steady state by a catheter introduced into the right jugular vein. Data
were digitized with a sampling rate of 1,000 Hz and recorded with
specialized software (hem; Notocord, Croissy-Sur-Seine,
France) before analysis of pressure–volume loops with pvan
software (Millar Instruments). Assessment of Left Ventricular Function in Isolated Work-Performing
Hearts. After excision, hearts were immediately perfused at 37.5°C and at
constant pressure of 60 mmHg (1 mmHg = 133 Pa) in a retrograde
fashion through the aorta with modified Krebs buffer gassed with 95%
O2/5% CO2. A catheter
was passed through the pulmonary vein into the left ventricle, pulled
through the ventricular wall, anchored in the apex by a fluted end, and
connected to a tip-micromanometer (1.4 French; Millar Instruments). The
left atrium was cannulated through the same pulmonary vein. Hearts were
switched to the working mode with constant preload and afterload
pressures of 10 and 60 mmHg, respectively, and allowed to stabilize for
30 min. Aortic outflow and atrial inflow were measured continuously by
using ultrasonic flow probes (HSE/Transonic Systems, Ithaca, NY). All
hemodynamic data were digitized at a sampling rate of 1,000 Hz and
recorded by specialized software (hem). Calcium Transients and Shortening in Isolated Cardiomyocytes. Cardiomyocytes were isolated from hearts perfused 10 min with 0.8
mg/ml collagenase solution using a Langendorff column (29). After
2 h of incubation allowing adhesion of the cells on laminin,
cardiomyocytes were preloaded with indo 1/AM, a fluorescent calcium
dye that can freely diffuse across cell membrane. Measurements were
carried out by dual-emission fluorimetry with the mean emission
405/480 nm ratio of each cell being used as an index of free cellular
calcium. Electrical pacing was performed at a frequency of 1 Hz.
Cardiomyocyte shortening was measured by video edge detection of the
cells. Measurement of Flow-Induced Dilatation in Isolated Perfused Carotid
Arteries. Right carotid arteries (approximately 7 mm in length) were excised and
maintained at 37°C in modified Krebs–Ringer solution gassed with
95% O2/5% CO2. The
arteries were cannulated at both extremities and perfused such that
flow and pressure could be modified independently (30). Artery outer
diameter, determined with a binocular loop connected to a video camera,
and perfusion pressure were continuously recorded by using
acqknowledge
881(mp100ws)
software (Biopac System, Les Ulis, France). The arteries were
equilibrated for 45 min at a transmural pressure of 70 mmHg and a
luminal flow rate of 10 μl/min. Changes in outer diameter after
step-increases in luminal flow rate were evaluated in arteries
precontracted by 10−6 M phenylephrine. Passive
diameter was measured at termination after incubation of the arteries
for 40 min in Ca2+-free control solution
containing 2 mM EGTA and 0.1 mM nitroprusside. Results The mouse tissue kallikrein gene has been disrupted by replacing
100 bp of exon 4 with the neomycin-resistance gene (Fig.
(Fig.11
Northern analysis of various tissue RNAs shows the absence of the 1-kb
tissue kallikrein mRNA in the kidneys, colon, and pancreas of
TK−/− mice (Fig. (Fig.11 Measurement of kinin-forming activity in organs and bodily fluids
shows an almost complete lack of activity in
TK−/− mice and a half reduction in
TK+/− mice when compared with
TK+/+ mice (Table
1). Significant kinin-forming activity
still is present in salivary glands, indicating that some members of
the kallikrein gene family code for active kinin-forming enzymes.
Nevertheless, tissue kallikrein represents by far the main enzyme
responsible for the generation of kinins in salivary glands as in the
other organs. The absence of endogenous bradykinin in
TK−/− mice points to tissue kallikrein as the
major enzyme able to generate significant levels of kinins in healthy
organs in vivo (Table 1). In the heart, kinin-forming
activity and bradykinin levels are below the detection limit in all
mice independently of the genotype.
Although systolic blood pressure is not modified by the lack of
kallikrein (134.3 ± 4.3 versus 125.7 ± 3.6 mmHg in
TK+/+ mice; P = 0.19), cardiac
function is abnormal in TK−/− mice. Left
ventricular fractional shortening assessed by echocardiography is
decreased in TK−/− mice as compared with
TK+/+ mice (Fig.
(Fig.22 μl; P < 0.004) and the reduced maximum
pressure developments (Fig. (Fig.22
The histological organization of the myocardium in
TK−/− mice appears normal with no indication of
myofibrillar disarray, fibrosis, necrosis, or inflammation (data not
shown). However, a thinning of the septum and left ventricular
posterior wall is evidenced in TK−/− mice by
echocardiography (Fig. (Fig.33 In addition to the cardiac defects, an altered vascular reactivity can
be detected in TK−/− mice. Indeed,
flow-dependent but not acetylcholine-induced vasodilatation is impaired
in perfused carotid arteries isolated from
TK−/− mice as compared with those isolated from
TK+/+ mice (Fig. (Fig.22 Discussion In all mammalian species studied so far, the tissue kallikrein
gene belongs to a family of clustered genes encoding serine proteases
and exhibiting very high sequence similarity (32). Gene targeting
methods were used to disrupt the mouse tissue kallikrein gene on
chromosome 7 (mKlk1, previously named mGK6; ref. 20). Despite the
presence of the other members of the gene family, the efficiency of the
homologous recombination events was similar to what is habitually
obtained for single gene, i.e., 4 targeted embryonic stem cell clones
of 227 clones surviving the G418 and gancyclovir selection. Three
different arguments indicate that the other genes of the family have
not been disrupted and that their expression is not profoundly
perturbed. First, restriction profiles performed with five different
enzymes are identical in the four targeted embryonic stem cell clones
with no indication of chromosomal rearrangement in a 25-kb region,
containing at least two other members of the gene family, in the
immediate vicinity of the tissue kallikrein gene (data not shown).
Second, in the salivary glands, the remaining 1-kb Northern band
observed in TK−/− mice is attributable to
crosshybridization of the probe with mRNAs encoded by the other members
of the tissue kallikrein gene family, which are all expressed in this
tissue (31). The decrease intensity of the remaining 1-kb band in
TK−/− mice is mainly attributable to the lack
of tissue kallikrein mRNA whose expression can be estimated by the
intensity of the 2.6-kb band, whereas the expression of the other genes
remains approximately the same as that in TK+/+
mice. Third, mKlk5, the closest gene present immediately upstream of
the tissue kallikrein gene and transcribed in the same direction,
appears to be similarly expressed in the salivary glands of
TK+/+ mice and TK−/− mice
as assessed by RT-PCR (data not shown). No tissue kallikrein mRNA is detected in the kidneys, colon, and
pancreas of TK−/− mice, and a half reduction is
observed in the organs of TK+/− mice as
expected. The lack of functional mRNA encoding tissue kallikrein is
confirmed by immunohistochemistry data that show a complete absence of
the protease in the kidneys and salivary glands. The almost total
disappearance of kinin-forming activity in
TK−/− mice (96.3% in the kidneys, 94.5% in
the colon, 99.7% in the pancreas, 98.5% in salivary glands, 99.6% in
urine, and 99.0% in the feces) indicates that tissue kallikrein is the
main enzyme generating kinins in vivo. This finding is
confirmed by the absence of detectable endogenous
bradykinin in the kidneys of TK−/− mice. Thus,
the other enzymes suspected to be involved in the generation of kinins,
notably plasma kallikrein and the serine proteases encoded by the
tissue kallikrein gene family (5, 8), do not seem to participate
significantly in the process in most organs. However, it remains to be
established whether these enzymes play a role in kinin formation during
pathological conditions such as inflammation or infection. The availability of a kinin-free mouse model is important to decipher
the physiological role of the kallikrein–kinin system. Defined
phenotypes already have been demonstrated in B2- or
B1-receptor-deficient mice. Inactivation of the B2-receptor gene
provokes salt-sensitive hypertension (33, 34), altered nociception
(35), and reduced urine-concentrating ability (36). Mice lacking the B1
receptor exhibit hypoalgesia and altered inflammatory response (37).
However, because of the close proximity of the two genes on chromosome
12, it is unlikely that the breeding of the two mouse strains will
easily provide mice lacking both receptors in the near future. In
addition, the unexpected existence of two genes encoding
kallikrein-sensitive kininogens in the mouse (P.M., unpublished data)
will certainly delay the generation of kininogen-free mice as well. Blood pressure is not significantly different between
TK+/+ and TK−/− mice even
though the decrease in renal and urinary kallikrein activity in
TK−/− mice reproduces the phenotype that
repeatedly has been associated with hypertension in human and rat
studies (13–15, 38). This finding suggests that low renal kallikrein
synthesis is not a primary cause of high blood pressure but rather a
consequence of hypertension and/or of the associated kidney defects.
Nevertheless, it is possible that TK−/− mice
harboring different genetic backgrounds or exposed to some
environmental conditions known to influence blood pressure, such as
high-sodium or low-potassium dietary intakes, may develop hypertension. The most obvious phenotype of TK−/− mice is the
abnormal structure and function of the heart.
Tissue-kallikrein-deficient mice present early in adulthood a thinning
of left ventricular walls and a diminished left ventricular mass. These
structural abnormalities are accompanied by a reduced cardiac function
that can be evidenced under basal conditions or during acute
β-adrenergic stimulation. This cardiac dysfunction does not seem to
result from an intrinsic cardiomyocyte defect as suggested by the
normal left ventricular function at low afterload and preload pressure
values and by similar calcium cycling and systolic shortening in
isolated cardiomyocytes from TK+/+ and
TK−/− mice. The histological organization of
the myocardium in TK−/− mice also seems normal
with no indication of myofibrillar disarray, fibrosis, necrosis, or
inflammation. In these conditions, the decreased cardiac function in
TK−/− mice is most simply explained by the
reduced left ventricular mass and the thinner left ventricular walls,
which would be unable to develop an adequate contractile force. Such a
normal histological architecture of the myocardium associated to a
cardiac dysfunction has been described in stunned myocardium phenotype
(28) but is in sharp contrast to the myocyte disarray, necrosis,
and/or fibrosis observed in hypertrophic or dilated cardiomyopathies
(39–41). The cardiac abnormalities of TK−/−
mice are reminiscent of those observed in some forms of hypokinetic
mildly dilated cardiomyopathy (42, 43), but an exact corresponding
phenotype is yet to be found in humans. These data show that a paracrine regulatory system directly controlled
by environmental factors, and not only the components of sarcomeres and
cytoskeleton (44, 45), can play a significant role in the maintenance
of normal cardiac structure and function. The exact mechanisms by which
the heart becomes abnormal in TK−/− mice remain
to be established. The phenotype might be a direct consequence of the
absence of tissue kallikrein in blood vessels. Indeed, the observation
that the protease plays an important role in flow-dependent induced
dilatation through locally generated kinins, as demonstrated in the
carotid artery (46), brings the possibility that the growth deficit of
left ventricular walls in TK−/− mice could
result from an altered function of the coronary arteries.
Alternatively, kinins also may exert a direct trophic effect on the
cardiomyocytes through the B2 receptor as suggested recently by
in vitro and in vivo studies (47). Finally, we
cannot exclude that the lack of tissue kallikrein in excretory organs
may induce systemic disturbances participating to the development of
the cardiac phenotype even though no evidence of electrolytic unbalance
was found under basal conditions in TK−/− mice
(data not shown). Tissue-kallikrein-deficient mice provide a kinin-free mouse model
that should be useful for investigating the role of kinins in many
different biological functions and the existence of potential
kinin-independent effects of tissue kallikrein. The cardiac phenotype
of these mice together with the data recently obtained in transgenic
rats overexpressing human tissue kallikrein in the heart (19) raise the
possibility that the tissue kallikrein gene, like the
B2-bradykinin-receptor gene (48), could be involved in the development
or progression of cardiovascular diseases. Acknowledgments This work was supported by the Institut National de la Santé
et de la Recherche Médicale, the Bristol-Myers Squibb
Pharmaceutical Research Institute, and the Association Claude Bernard. Footnotes Abbreviations footnote: TK, tissue kallikrein; RT, reverse
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