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Nicotine-induced adrenal beta-arrestin1 upregulation mediates tobacco-related hyperaldosteronism leading to cardiac dysfunction.

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TLDR
Adrenal βarrestin1 upregulation is one of the mechanisms by which tobacco compounds, like nicotine, promote cardio-toxic hyperaldosteronism in vitro and in vivo, and represents a novel therapeutic target for tobacco-related heart disease prevention or mitigation.
Abstract
Background Tobacco-related products, containing the highly addictive nicotine together with numerous other harmful toxicants and carcinogens, have been clearly associated with coronary artery disease, heart failure, stroke, and other heart diseases. Among the mechanisms by which nicotine contributes to heart disease is elevation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) activity. Nicotine, and its major metabolite in humans cotinine, have been reported to induce RAAS activation, resulting in aldosterone elevation in smokers. Aldosterone has various direct and indirect adverse cardiac effects. It is produced by the adrenal cortex in response to angiotensin II (AngII) activating AngII type 1 receptors. RAAS activity increases in chronic smokers, causing raised aldosterone levels (nicotine exposure causes the same in rats). AngII receptors exert their cellular effects via either G proteins or the two βarrestins (βarrestin1 and-2). Aim Since adrenal sarrestin1 is essential for adrenal aldosterone production and nicotine/cotinine elevate circulating aldosterone levels in humans, we hypothesized that nicotine activates adrenal sarrestin1, which contributes to RAAS activation and heart disease development. Methods We studied human adrenocortical zona glomerulosa H295R cells and found that nicotine and cotinine upregulate βarrestin1 mRNA and protein levels, thereby enhancing AngII-dependent aldosterone synthesis and secretion. Results In contrast, siRNA-mediated βarrestin1 knockdown reversed the effects of nicotine on AngII-induced aldosterone production in H295R cells. Importantly, nicotine promotes hyperaldosteronism via adrenal βarrestin1, thereby precipitating cardiac dysfunction, also in vivo, since nicotine-exposed experimental rats with adrenal-specific βarrestin1 knockdown display lower circulating aldosterone levels and better cardiac function than nicotine-exposed control animals with normal adrenal βarrestin1 expression. Conclusion Adrenal βarrestin1 upregulation is one of the mechanisms by which tobacco compounds, like nicotine, promote cardio-toxic hyperaldosteronism in vitro and in vivo. Thus, adrenal βarrestin1 represents a novel therapeutic target for tobacco-related heart disease prevention or mitigation.

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Correction to Beyond Desensitization: Physiological Relevance of Arrestin-Dependent Signaling

TL;DR: Recent evidence generated using arrestin knockouts, G protein-uncoupled receptor mutants, and arrestin pathway-selective “biased agonists” is beginning to reveal that arrestin signaling plays important roles in the retina, central nervous system, cardiovascular system, bone remodeling, immune system, and cancer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adrenal βarrestin1 targeting for tobacco–associated cardiac dysfunction treatment: Aldosterone production as the mechanistic link

TL;DR: The central hypothesis is that adrenal βarrestin1 is a novel molecular target for preventing tobacco–induced hyperaldosteronism, thereby also ameliorating tobacco–related heart disease development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of Aldosterone on the Failing Myocardium: Insights from Mitochondria and Adrenergic Receptors Signaling and Function.

TL;DR: A review of the current experimental evidence for this aldosterone/AR crosstalk in both the healthy and failing heart, and the impact of mitochondrial dysfunction in chronic human post-myocardial infarction (MI) heart failure (HF) is presented in this article.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: To build up the knowledge about the effect of currently employed ENDS on the pathogenesis of CKD, cellular and molecular mechanisms of ENDS xenobiotic on DM, AH, and kidney functions were reviewed.
Book ChapterDOI

GTPγS Assay for Measuring Agonist-Induced Desensitization of Two Human Polymorphic Alpha2B-Adrenoceptor Variants.

TL;DR: A three-glutamic acid deletion polymorphism in the human α2B-AR subtype gene causes impaired agonist-promoted receptor phosphorylation and desensitization, resulting in enhanced signaling to inhibition of cholinergic-induced catecholamine secretion in adrenal chromaffin cells.
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International Union of Pharmacology. XXIII. The Angiotensin II Receptors

TL;DR: Although AT(1) receptors mediate most of the known actions of Ang II, the AT(2) receptor contributes to the regulation of blood pressure and renal function and the development of specific nonpeptide receptor antagonists has led to major advances in the physiology, pharmacology, and therapy of the renin-angiotensin system.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transduction of receptor signals by beta-arrestins.

TL;DR: Another previously unappreciated strategy used by the receptors to regulate intracellular signaling pathways is indicated, which regulates aspects of cell motility, chemotaxis, apoptosis, and likely other cellular functions through a rapidly expanding list of signaling pathways.
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