Diminished α7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (α7nAChR) rescues amyloid-β induced atrial remodeling by oxi-CaMKII/MAPK/AP-1 axis-mediated mitochondrial oxidative stress.

Zhao Jikai; Yu Liming; Xue Xiaodong; Xu Yinli; Huang Tao; Xu Dengyue; Wang Zhishang; Luo Linyu; Wang Huishan
Redox biology 2023
Open on PubMed

The potential coexistence of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and atrial fibrillation (AF) is increasingly common as aging-related diseases. However, little is known about mechanisms responsible for atrial remodeling in AD pathogenesis. &#x3b1;7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (&#x3b1;7nAChR) has been shown to have profound effects on mitochondrial oxidative stress in both organ diseases. Here, we investigate the role of &#x3b1;7nAChR in mediating the effects of amyloid-&#x3b2; (A&#x3b2;) in cultured mouse atrial cardiomyocytes (HL-1&#xa0;cells) and AD model mice (APP/PS1). In vitro, apoptosis, oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction induced by A&#x3b2; long-term (72h) in HL-1&#xa0;cells were prevented by &#x3b1;-Bungarotoxin(&#x3b1;-BTX), an antagonist of &#x3b1;7nAChR. This cardioprotective effect was due to reinstating Ca<sup>2+</sup> mishandling by decreasing the activation of CaMKII and MAPK signaling pathway, especially the oxidation of CaMKII (oxi-CaMKII). In vivo studies demonstrated that targeting knockdown of &#x3b1;7nAChR in cardiomyocytes could ameliorate AF progression in late-stage (12 months) APP/PS1 mice. Moreover, &#x3b1;7nAChR deficiency in cardiomyocytes attenuated APP/PS1-mutant induced atrial remodeling characterized by reducing fibrosis, atrial dilation, conduction dysfunction, and inflammatory mediator activities via suppressing oxi-CaMKII/MAPK/AP-1. Taken together, our findings suggest that diminished &#x3b1;7nAChR could rescue A&#x3b2;-induced atrial remodeling through oxi-CaMKII/MAPK/AP-1-mediated mitochondrial oxidative stress in atrial cells and AD mice.