Journal of molecular and cellular cardiology
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J. Mol. Cell. Cardiol. · Sep 2013
Dose-dependent diastolic dysfunction and early death in a mouse model with cardiac troponin mutations.
Our aim was to explore the dose-dependent diastolic dysfunction and the mechanisms of heart failure and early death in transgenic (TG) mice modeling human restrictive cardiomyopathy (RCM). The first RCM mouse model (cTnI(193His) mice) carrying cardiac troponin I (cTnI) R193H mutation (mouse cTnI R193H equals to human cTnI R192H) was generated several years ago in our laboratory. The RCM mice manifested a phenotype similar to that observed in RCM patients carrying the same cTnI mutation, i.e. enlarged atria and restricted ventricles. ⋯ Diastolic dysfunction caused by R193H troponin I mutation is specific, showing a dose-dependent pattern. These mouse models are useful tools for the study of diastolic dysfunction. Impaired diastole can cause myocardial ischemia and fibrosis formation, resulting in the development of systolic dysfunction and heart failure with early death in the RCM mice with a high level of the mutant protein in the heart.