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    Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol. 2003 Nov;285(5):H2132-41. Epub 2003 Jul 24.

    Hypoxia-induced left ventricular dysfunction in myoglobin-deficient mice.

    Mammen PP, Kanatous SB, Yuhanna IS, Shaul PW, Garry MG, Balaban RS, Garry DJ.

    Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, 5323 Harry Hines Boulevard, Dallas, TX 75390-8573, USA.

    Myoglobin-deficient mice are viable and have preserved cardiac function due to their ability to mount a complex compensatory response involving increased vascularization and the induction of the hypoxia gene program (hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha, endothelial PAS, heat shock protein27, etc.). To further define and explore functional roles for myoglobin, we challenged age- and gender-matched wild-type and myoglobin-null mice to chronic hypoxia (10% oxygen for 1 day to 3 wk). We observed a 30% reduction in cardiac systolic function in the myoglobin mutant mice exposed to chronic hypoxia with no changes observed in the wild-type control hearts. The cardiac dysfunction observed in the hypoxic myoglobin-null mice was reversible with reexposure to normoxic conditions and could be prevented with treatment of an inhibitor of nitric oxide (NO) synthases. These results support the conclusion that hypoxia-induced cardiac dysfunction in myoglobin-null mice occurs via a NO-mediated mechanism. Utilizing enzymatic assays for NO synthases and immunohistochemical analyses, we observed a marked induction of inducible NO synthase in the hypoxic myoglobin mutant ventricle compared with the wild-type hypoxic control ventricle. These new data establish that myoglobin is an important cytoplasmic cardiac hemoprotein that functions in regulating NO homeostasis within cardiomyocytes.

    PMID: 12881221 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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