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Vol. 295, Issue 2, 621-626, November 2000
Faculté de Pharmacie, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada (C.B., D.F., G.M., A.A.); and Division of Cardiology, University Health Network, Toronto General Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada (J.-L.R.)
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Abstract |
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Because part of the cardioprotective effects of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors results from their protective effects on cardiac bradykinin (BK) metabolism, the purpose of this study was to define the metabolism of BK in normal and failing human hearts and to compare the effect of omapatrilat, a vasopeptidase inhibitor (VPI), which simultaneously inhibits both neutral endopeptidase (NEP) and ACE, with that of an ACE inhibitor. Exogenous BK at a nanomolar concentration was incubated alone, in the presence of an ACE inhibitor (ramiprilat, 36 nM), or in the presence of a VPI (omapatrilat, 61 nM) with left ventricular membranes prepared from normal donor hearts (n = 7), and hearts from patients with an ischemic (n = 11) or dilated (n = 12) cardiomyopathy (DCM). The half-lives calculated for BK alone (199 ± 60, 224 ± 108, and 283 ± 122 s; P = NS) exhibited similar values for normal, ischemic, and DCM heart tissues, respectively. Ramiprilat significantly increased the half-life of BK (P < .01), but the effect was similar for the three kinds of tissues (297 ± 104, 267 ± 157, and 407 ± 146 s, respectively; P = NS). The potentiating effect of the VPI omapatrilat on the kinetic parameter of BK (478 ± 210, 544 ± 249, and 811 ± 349 s, respectively) was greater than that of the ACE inhibitor (P < .01). Moreover, omapatrilat had a more important potentiating effect with DCM than normal heart membranes (P < .05). These results show that not only ACE but also and mainly NEP play an important role in the degradation of BK in human heart membranes. Omapatrilat, a VPI, has a greater protective effect on BK metabolism than that of a pure ACE inhibitor. Thus, inhibition of both ACE and NEP with omapatrilat could be more cardioprotective than ACE inhibition alone.
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Introduction |
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Angiotensin-converting
enzyme (ACE; EC 3.4.15.1) inhibitors have been shown to improve
long-term survival in patients with severe congestive heart failure
(CHF), to prevent the development of heart failure and recurrent
myocardial infarction (MI) in patients surviving MI, and to improve
endothelial dysfunction in patients with coronary artery disease [The
CONSENSUS Trial Study Group, 1987
; Pfeffer et al., 1992
; The Acute
Infarction Ramipril Efficacy (AIRE) Study Investigators, 1993
; Mancini
et al., 1996
]. Different mechanisms have been proposed to explain
these beneficial effects of ACE inhibitors. The major local effect was
initially thought to be the result of partial inhibition of the cardiac
conversion of angiotensin I to angiotensin II; all of the components of
the renin-angiotensin system being present in the cardiac tissue (Dzau, 1988
). The presence of a local kallikrein-kinin system has also been
demonstrated in the heart (Nolly et al., 1994
; Minshall et al., 1995
;
Yayama et al., 2000
). The activation of that system leads to the
release of bradykinin (BK) that exerts its pharmacological effects by
stimulating B2 receptors (Linz et al., 1995
;
Matoba et al., 1999
). Mounting evidence suggests that inhibition of the degradation of BK by ACE inhibitors may be as, if not more, important than the inhibition of angiotensin II formation (Linz et al., 1995
).
The increased formation of nitric oxide, cGMP, and prostaglandins mediates the vasodilator, anti-ischemic, and antiproliferative effects
of BK (Linz et al., 1995
). Although some information regarding the
effects of ACE inhibitors on the production of angiotensin II in the
human heart is available (Urata et al., 1990
), there is little
information regarding the effects of ACE inhibitors on the metabolism
of BK in the human heart.
In previous studies, we described the metabolism of BK in different
normal and pathological animal models (Blais et al., 1997
; Dumoulin et
al., 1998
; Raut et al., 1999
). In normal hearts, we demonstrated that
important differences exist in the metabolism of BK among the different
animal species most often used to evaluate the role of BK in the
cardioprotective effects of ACE inhibitors (Blais et al., 1997
).
Nevertheless, we found that rat and human heart membrane preparations
degrade BK at a similar rate. In rat hearts, Dumoulin et al. (1998)
have demonstrated that both ACE and neutral endopeptidase (NEP; EC
3.4.24.11) play an important role in the metabolism of BK by the
endothelium of the coronary vascular bed. More recently, Raut et al.
(1999)
, using a model of MI induced in the rat by coronary ligation,
have shown that the cardiac metabolism of BK by representative membrane
preparations of the cardiomyocytes is profoundly modified in the acute
and chronic postinfarction state and that the relative importance of
ACE and NEP in that metabolism changes markedly.
The development of a new class of cardiovascular agents, the
vasopeptidase inhibitors (VPIs), single molecules that simultaneously inhibit both NEP and ACE (Robl et al., 1997
), may be expected to
increase cardiac BK t1/2 much more
than ACE inhibitors alone. The purpose of the present study was thus to
define the effects of simultaneous inhibition of NEP and ACE with the
new VPI omapatrilat that inhibits both enzymes with similar nanomolar
inhibitory constants (Ki) (Robl et al.,
1997
; Trippodo et al., 1998
) and to compare the protective effect of
omapatrilat to that of a pure ACE inhibitor, ramiprilat. The effects of
omapatrilat and ramiprilat on BK metabolism were compared not only in
normal hearts but also in hearts with either ischemic or nonischemic
end-stage heart failure.
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Materials and Methods |
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Drugs, Peptides, and Reagents
BK was purchased from Peninsula Laboratories (Belmont, CA). The ACE inhibitor ramiprilat was a generous gift from Hoechst Marion Roussel Canada (Laval, Québec, Canada). The VPI omapatrilat was kindly provided for research purposes by Bristol-Myers Squibb (Princeton, NJ). Actinonin, apstatin, 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl) dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulphonic acid, hippuryl-L-histidyl-L-leucine, and Pro-Ile were from Sigma-Aldrich (Oakville, Ontario, Canada). 7-Amido-4-methylcoumarin (AMC) and succinyl-alanyl-alanyl-phenylalanyl-AMC were from Bachem (Torrence, CA). Phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF), p-chloromercuriphenyl sulfonate (PCMS), o-phenanthroline, alkaline phosphatase-labeled anti-digoxigenin Fab fragments, and p-nitrophenyl phosphate were purchased from Boehringer Mannheim (Laval, Québec, Canada). n-[1(R,S)-Carboxy-3-phenylpropyl]-Ala-Ala-Phe-pAB (cFP-AAF-pAB) was kindly provided by Dr. M. Orlowski (Department of Pharmacology, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY). Ethanol of HPLC grade was obtained from American Chemicals (Montréal, Québec, Canada). All other chemicals of analytical grade were from Fisher Scientific (Montréal, Québec, Canada).
Human Heart Samples
Human heart tissues were obtained from the Réseau de la
fonction ventriculaire (Montreal Heart Institute, Montréal,
Québec, Canada). Metabolism of BK was assessed in 30 human
hearts. The failing hearts (n = 23) were harvested
during cardiac transplantation. The explanted hearts from patients with
CHF were rinsed in a cardioprotective solution and immediately frozen
in liquid nitrogen and stored at
80°C. The normal hearts
(n = 7) were hearts that were harvested for the purpose
of cardiac transplant but could not be used for various technical or
logistic reasons. Once the decision not to use the heart was made it
was rapidly frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at
80°C. The
explanted hearts were classified as follows: normal donor hearts
(n = 7; 53 ± 6 years; 4 men and 3 women), and
hearts from patients with ischemic (ICM; n = 11;
57 ± 5 years; 10 men and 1 woman) or dilated (DCM;
n = 12; 57 ± 6 years; 5 men and 7 women)
cardiomyopathy. The use of these tissues was approved by the ethics
committees on human subjects of the Montreal Heart Institute and the
University of Montreal (Montréal, Québec, Canada).
Preparation of Total Heart Membrane Suspensions
To assess the metabolism of BK by enzymes located on cardiac
cell membranes, membranes were prepared from the hearts using the
method previously used to define the metabolism of BK in normal and
pathological rat hearts (Blais et al., 1997
; Raut et al., 1999
). The
left (LV) and right (RV) ventricular portions of each human heart were
cut into 3- to 4-mm pieces, and then homogenized (10 ml/g tissue) at
4°C in a 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.4, using a polytron homogenizer
(Brinkmann Instruments, Rexdale, Ontario, Canada) at setting 8 for
15 s. After centrifugation (40,000g, 20 min at 4°C),
the cytosolic supernatant was discarded, and the pellet of membranes
was resuspended in a 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.4, containing 100 mM
NaCl at 4°C. The fibrous tissue was discarded with a Wheaton
potter-Elvehjem tissue grinder (setting 8 for 60 s) (Fisher
Scientific, Pittsburgh, PA). The protein concentration of the membrane
suspensions was determined by the bicinchoninic acid method (Pierce,
Rockford, IL) using bovine serum albumin as the standard.
Metabolism of BK
Incubation of BK with Heart Membrane Suspensions.
The
metabolic profile of BK was measured at 37°C as described previously
(Blais et al., 1997
; Raut et al., 1999
) using the membrane preparations
diluted in a 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.4, containing 100 mM NaCl. Ten
microliters of a BK solution was added to 990 µl of the membrane
suspension (protein concentration ~5 mg/ml) to obtain a final
concentration of 471 nM BK. After various incubation periods at 37°C,
ranging between 2 and 20 min, the reaction was stopped by the addition
of cold ethanol (4°C) at a final concentration of 80% v/v. In two
sets of parallel experiments, and before adding the synthetic BK, the
membrane suspensions were preincubated for 15 min at 37°C with either
ramiprilat (36 nM) or omapatrilat (61 nM). In preliminary studies, we
have determined that these concentrations of ramiprilat and omapatrilat
inhibit totally ACE activity, and ACE and NEP activities, respectively. The precipitated samples were centrifuged 15 min at 4°C and
2000g. The clear supernatants containing BK and its
metabolites were evaporated to drynesss in a Speed Vac concentrator
(Savant, Farmingdale, NY). The residues were stored at
80°C until
quantification of the residual BK was performed.
Quantification of BK.
Immunoreactive BK was quantified in
the residues of the evaporated ethanolic extracts using a highly
specific enzyme immunoassay developed in our laboratory (Décarie
et al., 1994
; Blais et al., 1997
). This assay uses highly specific
polyclonal rabbit IgG raised against the carboxy-terminal end of BK,
digoxigenin-labeled peptide as tracer, and alkaline phosphatase-labeled
anti-digoxigenin Fab fragments with the substrate
p-nitrophenyl phosphate to detect and quantify the immune
complexes (Décarie et al., 1994
). Each sample was measured in triplicate.
Kinetic Parameters Analysis.
BK hydrolysis rate constant
(k) was evaluated with the first order equation [BK] = [BK]o × e
kt, where
[BK] is the concentration of BK at a given time and
[BK]o is the BK at time = 0. The BK
t1/2 was represented at
t1/2 = ln(2)/k (Moore and
Pearson, 1981
). The different t1/2 values
were expressed for 1 mg of protein.
Measurement of ACE and NEP Activities
The membranes used for BK metabolism were solubilized in 8 mM
3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulphonic acid as
described by Costerousse et al. (1994)
. ACE activity was measured using
the colorimetric method of Cushman and Cheung (1971)
. NEP activity was
assessed using the fluorimetric assay described by Nortier et al.
(1995)
. Each sample was quantified in duplicate for both assays. ACE
activity was expressed in nanomoles of hippuric acid per minute per
milligram of protein, and NEP activity was expressed in nanomoles of
AMC per minute per milligram of protein.
Contribution of Other Peptidases in Metabolism of BK at Cardiac Membrane Level
To approach the potential role of other peptidases, besides ACE
and NEP, that may be involved in the metabolism of BK, pooled membranes
from the three groups of heart tissues were preincubated in the
above-mentioned conditions with omapatrilat (final concentration 61 nM)
and then further incubated with specific inhibitors for different
classes of enzymes: PMSF, inhibitor of serine proteinases; PCMS,
inhibitor of cysteine proteinases; and o-phenanthroline, inhibitor of metalloproteases, at a final concentration of 1 × 10
3 M.
In a second set of experiments, and after an identical preincubation in
the presence of the VPI, the effect of different specific metallopeptidase inhibitors on the degradation of BK was tested at a
final concentration of 1 × 10
3 M:
cFP-AAF-pAB (endopeptidase 24.15 inhibitor; Orlowski et al., 1988
),
Pro-Ile (endopeptidase 24.16 inhibitor; Dauch et al., 1991
), actinonin
(endopeptidase 24.18 inhibitor; Choudry and Kenny, 1991
), and apstatin
(aminopeptidase P inhibitor; Prechel et al., 1995
).
Statistical Analysis
All data were expressed as means ± S.D. for n values. A paired Student's t test was used to test the effect of ramiprilat and omapatrilat on BK t1/2 within a same group of hearts. An unpaired Student's t test was used to assess the effect of the RV and LV on BK t1/2 within a same group of hearts. One-way ANOVA was also used to assess statistical significance between the normal, ICM, and DCM heart groups. All pairwise comparisons were examined using Tukey's method of post hoc testing. A difference was accepted as significant at P < .05.
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Results |
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Metabolism of BK by Human Heart Membranes Prepared from LV and
RV.
Figure 1 represents the
t1/2 value of BK degradation when incubated
in presence of membranes prepared from the LV of normal, ICM, and DCM
hearts. The degradation rate of BK was similar for normal and
pathological tissues; the calculated t1/2
for normal hearts being 199 ± 60 s (n = 7),
for ICM 224 ± 108 s (n = 11), and for DCM
283 ± 122 s (n = 12; P = NS).
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Effect of Ramiprilat and Omapatrilat on BK
t1/2.
Preincubation of LV membranes
from the three types of patients with ramiprilat significantly
increased BK t1/2 (P < .01 for all comparisons). The potentiating effect of ACE inhibition on BK
t1/2 was similar in all three groups,
normal and both pathological heart tissues (Fig.
2).
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ACE and NEP Activities.
As shown in Fig.
3, the activities of the ACE and NEP
enzymes were similar in membrane preparations from all three groups of
hearts.
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Participation of Other Enzymes in Metabolism of BK at Membrane
Level.
The preincubation of DCM membranes (pools of six membrane
preparations; n = 3) in the presence of omapatrilat
plus different enzyme inhibitors allowed us to evaluate the
contribution of other peptidases potentially responsible for the
metabolism of BK once ACE and NEP were inhibited. Neither PMSF
(inhibitor of serine proteinases) nor PCMS (inhibitor of cysteine
proteinases) was found to inhibit the metabolism of BK. However,
o-phenanthroline (inhibitor of metallopeptidases)
totally inhibited the degradation of BK (Fig.
4). These results exclude the
participation of serine and cysteine proteinases in the metabolism of
BK by human heart membranes, and show that, besides ACE and NEP, only
metallopeptidases are responsible for the metabolism of BK in this
preparation. Identical results were found with normal and ICM heart
tissues (data not shown).
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Discussion |
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In this article, we demonstrate that the VPI omapatrilat inhibits
the metabolism of BK by human cardiac membrane preparations more than
the pure ACE inhibitor ramiprilat. Omapatrilat simultaneously inhibits
NEP and ACE with similar nanomolar inhibitory constants (9 and 6 nM,
respectively) (Trippodo et al., 1998
). Because of the cardioprotective
effects of BK (Linz et al., 1995
; Emanueli et al., 1999
; Matoba et al.,
1999
), it is therefore possible that a VPI may prove to be more
cardioprotective than a pure ACE inhibitor under certain pathological
conditions. This is particularly true considering that we found
superior protective effects of VPI on BK degradation in membranes
prepared from pathological human hearts (DCM).
The membrane preparation used in the present study is similar to that
used previously to define the importance of ACE in the cardiac
metabolism of angiotensin I (Kinoshita et al., 1993
), but also to study
the metabolism of BK in normal rat hearts (Blais et al., 1997
) and to
define the influence of MI and LV hypertrophy on the cardiac metabolism
of BK in rats (Raut et al., 1999
). This membrane preparation is
representative of cardiomyocytes because this is the cell type that
forms the overwhelming surface of the heart (Weber and Brilla, 1991
).
Recently, other authors have also used a similar membrane preparation
from human hearts to study the influence of single ACE, NEP, and
aminopeptidase M inhibition on the formation of the metabolites of BK
and Lys-BK (kallidin) after incubations for a fixed period of time (2 h) (Kokkonen et al., 1999
).
As method of detection of residual BK at the different incubation
times, we used a highly specific enzyme immunoassay developed in our
laboratory (Décarie et al., 1994
; Blais et al., 1997
). This assay
characterized by a sensitivity level of 0.1 pM allowed the definition
of the kinetic profile of disappearance of BK when incubated in a
biological milieu. These subpicomolar residual concentrations measured
with our approach contrast with the micromolar concentrations needed
for the physicochemical detection of BK and its metabolites after a
HPLC chromatography (Kokkonen et al., 1999
). However, because BK is
considered as an autocrine and a paracrine mediator being metabolized
locally at the site of its synthesis, rather than a hormone, the
concentration of BK used in our experimental approach would be closer
to the in vivo reality.
Under the conditions of this study, we measured similar
t1/2 values for normal and failing hearts,
whether the CHF was due to ischemic heart disease (ICM) or not (DCM).
The values are in the range of those we previously described for human
atria (143 ± 18 s) (Blais et al., 1997
). Moreover, these
values are also similar to those recently calculated for normal rat
hearts (150 ± 11 s) and hypertrophied rat LV (137 ± 34 s) (Blais et al., 1997
; Raut et al., 1999
). The relationship of
rat to human metabolism is interesting because rat is the species most
often used in experimental models to demonstrate the cardioprotective
effects of ACE inhibitors and the effect of ACE inhibitors on the
metabolism of exogenous BK. Our finding of no significant difference in
the t1/2 of BK degradation by membranes
prepared from normal and pathological hearts complete the findings of
Kokkonen et al. (1999)
who found no significant difference in the rate
of formation of BK[1-7], an inactive metabolite
of BK, between normal human hearts and hearts obtained at the time of
transplant for end-stage heart failure.
When membranes were preincubated with ramiprilat, the
t1/2 of BK was increased similarly in the
three kinds of membrane preparations. This modest but significant
potentiating effect found (19-49%) would not have been predicted by
the study of Kokkonen et al. (1999)
who showed that ACE had little or
no effect on cardiac metabolism of BK despite the fact that the
affinity of ACE for BK (Km = 0.18 µM;
kcat/Km = 3667 µM
1 · min
1) is
higher than that of other metallopeptidases susceptible to metabolize
BK (Erdös and Skidgel, 1997
). The most likely explanation for
this discrepancy probably results from methodological differences between the two studies, the major being the difference of
concentrations of BK measured between both protocols (pM versus µM)
and the sensitivity of both methods of detection. Our results are
nevertheless similar to those in the postinfarction rat heart except
that in the rat, the potentiating effect of the ACE inhibitor on the
t1/2 of BK was higher than that measured
for human hearts. This difference of effect between rats and humans
during ACE inhibition could be theoretically attributed to the
interference of endogenous ACE inhibitor in ICM and DCM hearts.
However, such interference was excluded because no difference could be
measured for the t1/2 of BK when the
metabolism was tested in absence of ramiprilat before and after
extensive dialysis of the membranes against a 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH
7.4, containing 100 mM NaCl (data not shown). Moreover, the ACE
activity was similar in the normal, ICM, and DCM human hearts.
We found that the VPI omapatrilat had a much greater protective effect
on cardiac BK metabolism compared with an ACE inhibitor alone. Kokkonen
et al. (1999)
using a specific NEP inhibitor (SCH 39370) found a
similar degradation pattern regardless of whether the membranes were
from normal or failing hearts. In our study, the effect of the
simultaneous inhibition of ACE and NEP on the metabolism of BK by human
cardiac membrane preparations was similar in normal and ICM hearts but
appeared to be greater in DCM hearts. The reason for this could be the
result of the simultaneous inhibition of both enzymes rather than a
pure ACE or NEP inhibition. In fact, Dumoulin et al. (1998)
using 10 nM
BK could not measure an inhibiting effect of retrothiorphan, a specific
NEP inhibitor, on the rate of degradation of BK
(Vmax/Km) by
the coronary vascular bed of rat hearts. The potentiating effect of
retrothiorphan becomes evident only in the presence of ACE inhibition.
These former observations and those presented in this article agree
with the kinetic constants for hydrolysis of BK by both ACE
(Km = 0.18 µM;
kcat/Km = 3667 µM
1 · min
1) and
NEP (Km = 120 µM;
kcat/Km = 39.8 µM
1 · min
1)
(Erdös and Skidgel, 1997
). The values of ACE and NEP activities measured with synthetic substrates are difficult to put in relation with the metabolism of BK, an endogenous substrate for both
metallopeptidases. Previously, we reported similar observations for
hypertrophied rat LV (Raut et al., 1999
).
ACE and NEP are not the only enzymes responsible for the metabolism of
BK. In fact, besides ACE and NEP, different purified aminopeptidases,
carboxypeptidases, and endopeptidases are potential candidates for the
use of BK as a substrate. Their nature and their kinetic parameters
have been reviewed recently (Erdös and Skidgel, 1997
). In this
study, we showed at the membrane level that only metallopeptidases are
involved in the metabolism of BK. Moreover, the use of specific
inhibitors of endopeptidase 24.15 (cFP-AAF-pAB; Orlowski et al., 1988
)
and endopeptidase 24.18 (actinonin; Choudry and Kenny, 1991
) pleads for
the participation of both enzymes, besides ACE and NEP, in the
metabolism of BK. These results show clearly that other
metallopeptidases that have been defined to have a membrane
localization are also involved in the metabolism of BK.
In conclusion, the simultaneous inhibition of NEP and ACE with the VPI omapatrilat that has similar nanomolar inhibitory constants for both metallopeptidases has a greater protective effect on BK metabolism by human cardiac membranes than an ACE inhibitor alone. This is true not only for membranes from normal hearts but also for membranes from hearts with end-stage heart failure. Indeed, the protective effect of the VPI omapatrilat on BK in cardiac membranes from DCM hearts is greater than that in normal hearts. Because many of the cardioprotective effects of ACE inhibitors appear to be the result of their protective effects on BK degradation, there is reason to believe that VPI could have cardioprotective effects that are even greater than those of ACE inhibitor alone.
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Acknowledgment |
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We thank Nicole Gervais for excellent technical assistance.
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Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication July 19, 2000.
Received for publication April 6, 2000.
1 This study was supported by a Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association of Canada-Medical Research Council of Canada grant (to A.A. and J.-L.R.) and by a scholarship from the Fonds de la recherche en santé du Québec (to C.B.).
Send reprint requests to: Albert Adam, Ph.D., Faculté de pharmacie, Université de Montréal, 2900, Boul. Édouard-Montpetit, C.P. 6128, Succursale Centre-ville, Montréal, Québec H3C 3J7, Canada. E-mail: adama{at}pharm.umontreal.ca
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Abbreviations |
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ACE, angiotensin-converting enzyme; CHF, congestive heart failure; MI, myocardial infarction; BK, bradykinin; NEP, neutral endopeptidase; VPI, vasopeptidase inhibitor; AMC, 7-amido-4-methylcoumarin; PMSF, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride; PCMS, p-chloromercuriphenyl sulfonate; cFP-AAF-pAB, n-[1(R,S)-carboxy-3-phenylpropyl]-Ala-Ala-Phe-pAB; ICM, ischemic cardiomyopathy; DCM, dilated cardiomyopathy; LV, left ventricle; RV, right ventricle.
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