Endocrinology and Harold Hamm Diabetes Center, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center & Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Oklahoma City, OK.
J Am Heart Assoc. 2014 Feb 26;3(1):e000755. doi: 10.1161/JAHA.113.000755.
Patients with postural tachycardia syndrome (POTS) have exaggerated orthostatic tachycardia often following a viral illness, suggesting autoimmunity may play a pathophysiological role in POTS. We tested the hypothesis that they harbor functional autoantibodies to adrenergic receptors (AR).
Fourteen POTS patients (7 each from 2 institutions) and 10 healthy subjects were examined for α1AR autoantibody-mediated contractility using a perfused rat cremaster arteriole assay. A receptor-transfected cell-based assay was used to detect the presence of β1AR and β2AR autoantibodies. Data were normalized and expressed as a percentage of baseline. The sera of all 14 POTS patients demonstrated significant arteriolar contractile activity (69±3% compared to 91±1% of baseline for healthy controls, P<0.001) when coexisting β2AR dilative activity was blocked; and this was suppressed by α1AR blockade with prazosin. POTS sera acted as a partial α1AR antagonist significantly shifting phenylephrine contractility curves to the right. All POTS sera increased β1AR activation (130±3% of baseline, P<0.01) and a subset had increased β2AR activity versus healthy subjects. POTS sera shifted isoproterenol cAMP response curves to the left, consistent with enhanced β1AR and β2AR agonist activity. Autoantibody-positive POTS sera demonstrated specific binding to β1AR, β2AR, and α1AR in transfected cells.
POTS patients have elevated α1AR autoantibodies exerting a partial peripheral antagonist effect resulting in a compensatory sympathoneural activation of α1AR for vasoconstriction and concurrent βAR-mediated tachycardia. Coexisting β1AR and β2AR agonistic autoantibodies facilitate this tachycardia. These findings may explain the increased standing plasma norepinephrine and excessive tachycardia observed in many POTS patients.
体位性心动过速综合征(POTS)患者在病毒感染后常出现体位性心动过速过度,这表明自身免疫可能在 POTS 中发挥病理生理作用。我们检验了以下假说,即他们存在针对肾上腺素能受体(AR)的功能性自身抗体。
使用灌注大鼠提睾肌动脉小动脉试验,对 14 名 POTS 患者(分别来自 2 个机构的 7 名)和 10 名健康受试者进行α1AR 自身抗体介导的收缩性检测。使用转染细胞的基于测定的方法检测β1AR 和β2AR 自身抗体的存在。数据进行归一化并表示为与基线相比的百分比。当共存的β2AR 扩张活性被阻断时,所有 14 名 POTS 患者的血清均显示出明显的小动脉收缩活性(与健康对照组的 91±1%相比为 69±3%,P<0.001);并且这种活性被用普萘洛尔阻断α1AR 所抑制。POTS 血清作为部分α1AR 拮抗剂,显著将去氧肾上腺素收缩曲线向右移位。所有 POTS 血清均增加了β1AR 激活(与基线相比为 130±3%,P<0.01),并且一部分与健康受试者相比具有增加的β2AR 活性。POTS 血清将异丙肾上腺素 cAMP 反应曲线向左移位,这与增强的β1AR 和β2AR 激动剂活性一致。自身抗体阳性的 POTS 血清在转染细胞中显示出对β1AR、β2AR 和α1AR 的特异性结合。
POTS 患者的α1AR 自身抗体水平升高,产生部分外周拮抗剂效应,导致交感神经对α1AR 的代偿性激活,从而引起血管收缩和同时发生的βAR 介导的心动过速。共存的β1AR 和β2AR 激动性自身抗体促进了这种心动过速。这些发现可能解释了许多 POTS 患者中观察到的站立时血浆去甲肾上腺素升高和过度心动过速。