4.7 Article

CaMKII regulates the proteins TPM1 and MYOM2 and promotes diacetylmorphine-induced abnormal cardiac rhythms

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SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
卷 13, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-32941-6

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Although opioids are necessary for certain medical purposes, such as pain treatment, their abuse poses a serious threat to society. In this study, we found that heroin can cause abnormal changes in the heart's electrical activity and damage to heart muscle cells. These effects are attributed to an increase in the phosphorylation of CaMKII, which leads to abnormal expression of myocardial contractile proteins. By using a CaMKII inhibitor, we were able to rescue the toxic effects of heroin on heart muscle cells and the abnormal changes in the electrocardiogram of rats. These findings provide a theoretical basis for the treatment and prevention of heroin-induced arrhythmias.
Although opioids are necessary for the treatment of acute pain, cancer pain, and palliative care, opioid abuse is a serious threat to society. Heroin (Diacetylmorphine) is the most commonly abused opioid, and it can have a variety of effects on the body's tissues and organs, including the well-known gastrointestinal depression and respiratory depression; however, there is little known about the effects of diacetylmorphine on cardiac damage. Here, we demonstrate that diacetylmorphine induces abnormal electrocardiographic changes in rats and causes damage to cardiomyocytes in vitro by an underlying mechanism of increased autophosphorylation of CaMKII and concomitant regulation of myocardial contractile protein TPM1 and MYOM2 protein expression. The CaMKII inhibitor KN-93 was first tested to rescue the toxic effects of heroin on cardiomyocytes in vitro and the abnormal ECG changes caused by heroin in SD rats, followed by the TMT relative quantitative protein technique to analyze the proteome changes. Diacetylmorphine causes increased phosphorylation at the CaMKII Thr287 site in myocardium, resulting in increased autophosphorylation of CaMKII and subsequent alterations in myocardial contractile proteins, leading to myocardial rhythm abnormalities. These findings provide a theoretical basis for the treatment and prevention of patients with arrhythmias caused by diacetylmorphine inhalation and injection.

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