Oxygen radicals regulate many physiological processes, such as signaling, proliferation, and apoptosis, and thus play a pivotal role in pathophysiology and disease development. There are at least two thioredoxin reductase/ thioredoxin/peroxiredoxin systems participating in the cellular defense against oxygen radicals. At present, relatively little is known about the contribution of individual enzymes to the redox metabolism in different cell types. To begin to address this question, we generated and characterized mice lacking functional mitochondrial thioredoxin reductase (TrxR2). Ubiquitous Cre-mediated inactivation of TrxR2 is associated with embryonic death at embryonic day 13. TrxR2 ؊/؊ embryos are smaller and severely anemic and show increased apoptosis in the liver. The size of hematopoietic colonies cultured ex vivo is dramatically reduced. TrxR2-deficient embryonic fibroblasts are highly sensitive to endogenous oxygen radicals when glutathione synthesis is inhibited. Besides the defect in hematopoiesis, the ventricular heart wall of TrxR2 ؊/؊ embryos is thinned and proliferation of cardiomyocytes is decreased. Cardiac tissue-restricted ablation of TrxR2 results in fatal dilated cardiomyopathy, a condition reminiscent of that in Keshan disease and Friedreich's ataxia. We conclude that TrxR2 plays a pivotal role in both hematopoiesis and heart function.Reactive oxygen species (ROS)-generated mainly as a byproduct of the respiratory chain or by oxidases-are implicated in the pathogenesis and pathophysiology of a variety of human diseases such as cancer, cardiovascular, and degenerative disorders. A variety of cellular antioxidant systems control the balance of free intra-and extracellular oxygen radicals. Previous efforts have addressed the physiological role of superoxide dismutases, catalases, and glutathione (GSH) peroxidases in vivo, but the role of the thioredoxin/thioredoxin reductase/ peroxiredoxin system in ROS removal has only recently attracted attention.Thioredoxins are small redox-active proteins with an essential function in DNA metabolism and repair, transcription, and cell-cell communication (1). Acting through peroxiredoxins, they also efficiently protect cells from oxidative damage (27). Cytosolic (Trx1) and mitochondrial (Trx2) thioredoxins are required for proliferation and protection from apoptosis during early embryogenesis (26). Moreover, in chicken B cells, Trx2 is critically involved in the regulation of mitochondriondependent apoptosis (37). More recently, heart-specific overexpression of dominant-negative Trx1 was shown to be associated with increased oxidative stress and cardiac hypertrophy in mice (39).Trx activities are governed by thioredoxin reductases (TrxRs) that, in turn, use NADPH/H ϩ as the reducing agent (23). TrxRs are members of the pyridine nucleotide-disulfide oxidoreductase family, form homodimers, and possess two interacting redox-active centers. The C-terminal redox center contains a catalytically important selenocysteine (SeCys) (9,17,41). In mammals, three TrxRs...
The composition of skeletal muscle, in terms of the relative number of slow-and fast-twitch fibers, is tightly regulated to enable an organism to respond and adapt to changing physical demands. The phosphatase calcineurin and its downstream targets, transcription factors of the nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT) family, play a critical role in this process by promoting the formation of slow-twitch, oxidative fibers. Calcineurin binds to calsarcins, a family of striated muscle-specific proteins of the sarcomeric Z-disc. We show here that mice deficient in calsarcin-2, which is expressed exclusively by fast-twitch muscle and encoded by the myozenin 1 (Myoz1) gene, have substantially reduced body weight and fast-twitch muscle mass in the absence of an overt myopathic phenotype. Additionally, Myoz1 KO mice displayed markedly improved performance and enhanced running distances in exercise studies. Analysis of fiber type composition of calsarcin-2-deficient skeletal muscles showed a switch toward slow-twitch, oxidative fibers. Reporter assays in cultured myoblasts indicated an inhibitory role for calsarcin-2 on calcineurin, and Myoz1 KO mice exhibited both an excess of NFAT activity and an increase in expression of regulator of calcineurin 1-4 (RCAN1-4), indicating enhanced calcineurin signaling in vivo. Taken together, these results suggest that calsarcin-2 modulates exercise performance in vivo through regulation of calcineurin/NFAT activity and subsequent alteration of the fiber type composition of skeletal muscle.
Background-We have previously shown that deficiency for the z-disc protein calsarcin-1 (CS1) sensitizes the heart to calcineurin signaling and to stimuli of pathological hypertrophy. In the present study we asked whether overexpression of CS1 might exhibit antihypertrophic effects, and therefore we tested this hypothesis both in vitro and in vivo. Methods and Results-Adenoviral gene transfer of CS1 into neonatal cardiomyocytes inhibited hypertrophy as a result of Gq-agonist stimulation, including angiotensin-II (Ang-II), endothelin-1, and phenylephrine. Consistently, Adenoviral gene transfer of CS1 also led to the reduction of increased levels of atrial natriuretic factor (mRNA) and the calcineurin-sensitive gene MCIP1.4, suggesting that CS1 inhibits calcineurin-dependent signaling. Furthermore, we generated CS1-overexpressing transgenic mice (CS1Tg). Unchallenged CS1Tg mice did not exhibit a pathological phenotype as assessed by echocardiography and analysis of cardiac gene expression. Likewise, when subjected to long-term infusion of Ang-II, both CS1Tg and wild-type mice developed a similar degree of arterial hypertension. Yet, in contrast to wild-type mice, Ang-II-treated CS1Tg animals did not display cardiac hypertrophy. Despite the absence of hypertrophy, both fractional shortening and dP/dt max were preserved in CS1Tg Ang-II-treated mice as assessed by echocardiography and cardiac catherization, respectively. Moreover, induction of the hypertrophic gene program (atrial natriuretic factor, brain natriuretic peptide) was markedly blunted, and expression of the calcineurin-dependent gene MCIP1.4 was significantly reduced in CS1Tg mice, again consistent with an inhibitory role of CS1 on calcineurin. Conclusions-The sarcomeric protein CS1 prevents Ang-II-induced cardiomyocyte hypertrophy at least in part via inhibition of calcineurin signaling. Thus, overexpression of CS1 might represent a novel approach to attenuate pathological cardiac hypertrophy.
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