Autophagy, an evolutionarily conserved process for the bulk degradation of cytoplasmic components, serves as a cell survival mechanism in starving cells. Although altered autophagy has been observed in various heart diseases, including cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure, it remains unclear whether autophagy plays a beneficial or detrimental role in the heart. Here, we report that the cardiac-specific loss of autophagy causes cardiomyopathy in mice. In adult mice, temporally controlled cardiac-specific deficiency of Atg5 (autophagy-related 5), a protein required for autophagy, led to cardiac hypertrophy, left ventricular dilatation and contractile dysfunction, accompanied by increased levels of ubiquitination. Furthermore, Atg5-deficient hearts showed disorganized sarcomere structure and mitochondrial misalignment and aggregation. On the other hand, cardiac-specific deficiency of Atg5 early in cardiogenesis showed no such cardiac phenotypes under baseline conditions, but developed cardiac dysfunction and left ventricular dilatation one week after treatment with pressure overload. These results indicate that constitutive autophagy in the heart under baseline conditions is a homeostatic mechanism for maintaining cardiomyocyte size and global cardiac structure and function, and that upregulation of autophagy in failing hearts is an adaptive response for protecting cells from hemodynamic stress.
Heart failure is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in industrialized countries. Although infection with microorganisms is not involved in the development of heart failure in most cases, inflammation has been implicated in the pathogenesis of heart failure1. However, the mechanisms responsible for initiating and integrating inflammatory responses within the heart remain poorly defined. Mitochondria are evolutionary endosymbionts derived from bacteria and contain DNA similar to bacterial DNA2,3,4. Mitochondria damaged by external hemodynamic stress are degraded by the autophagy/lysosome system in cardiomyocytes5. Here, we show that mitochondrial DNA that escapes from autophagy cell-autonomously leads to Toll-like receptor (TLR) 9-mediated inflammatory responses in cardiomyocytes and is capable of inducing myocarditis, and dilated cardiomyopathy. Cardiac-specific deletion of lysosomal deoxyribonuclease (DNase) II showed no cardiac phenotypes under baseline conditions, but increased mortality and caused severe myocarditis and dilated cardiomyopathy 10 days after treatment with pressure overload. Early in the pathogenesis, DNase II-deficient hearts exhibited infiltration of inflammatory cells and increased mRNA expression of inflammatory cytokines, with accumulation of mitochondrial DNA deposits in autolysosomes in the myocardium. Administration of the inhibitory oligodeoxynucleotides against TLR9, which is known to be activated by bacterial DNA6, or ablation of Tlr9 attenuated the development of cardiomyopathy in DNase II-deficient mice. Furthermore, Tlr9-ablation improved pressure overload-induced cardiac dysfunction and inflammation even in mice with wild-type Dnase2a alleles. These data provide new perspectives on the mechanism of genesis of chronic inflammation in failing hearts.
Damaged mitochondria are removed by mitophagy. Although Atg32 is essential for mitophagy in yeast, no Atg32 homologue has been identified in mammalian cells. Here, we show that Bcl-2-like protein 13 (Bcl2-L-13) induces mitochondrial fragmentation and mitophagy in mammalian cells. First, we hypothesized that unidentified mammalian mitophagy receptors would share molecular features of Atg32. By screening the public protein database for Atg32 homologues, we identify Bcl2-L-13. Bcl2-L-13 binds to LC3 through the WXXI motif and induces mitochondrial fragmentation and mitophagy in HEK293 cells. In Bcl2-L-13, the BH domains are important for the fragmentation, while the WXXI motif facilitates mitophagy. Bcl2-L-13 induces mitochondrial fragmentation in the absence of Drp1, while it induces mitophagy in Parkin-deficient cells. Knockdown of Bcl2-L-13 attenuates mitochondrial damage-induced fragmentation and mitophagy. Bcl2-L-13 induces mitophagy in Atg32-deficient yeast cells. Induction and/or phosphorylation of Bcl2-L-13 may regulate its activity. Our findings offer insights into mitochondrial quality control in mammalian cells.
Left ventricular remodeling that occurs after myocardial infarction (MI) and pressure overload is generally accepted as a determinant of the clinical course of heart failure. The molecular mechanism of this process, however, remains to be elucidated. Apoptosis signalregulating kinase 1 (ASK1) is a mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase that plays an important role in stress-induced apoptosis. We used ASK1 knockout mice (ASK ؊/؊ ) to test the hypothesis that ASK1 is involved in development of left ventricular remodeling. ASK ؊/؊ hearts showed no morphological or histological defects. Echocardiography and cardiac catheterization revealed normal global structure and function. Left ventricular structural and functional remodeling were determined 4 weeks after coronary artery ligation or thoracic transverse aortic constriction (TAC). ASK ؊/؊ had significantly smaller increases in left ventricular end-diastolic and end-systolic ventricular dimensions and smaller decreases in fractional shortening in both experimental models compared with WT mice. The number of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase biotin-dUDP nick end-labeling-positive myocytes after MI or TAC was decreased in ASK ؊/؊ compared with that in WT mice. Overexpression of a constitutively active mutant of ASK1 induced apoptosis in isolated rat neonatal cardiomyocytes, whereas neonatal ASK ؊/؊ cardiomyocytes were resistant to H2O2-induced apoptosis. An in vitro kinase assay showed increased ASK1 activity in heart after MI or TAC in WT mice. Thus, ASK1 plays an important role in regulating left ventricular remodeling by promoting apoptosis.
The molecular mechanism for the transition from cardiac hypertrophy, an adaptive response to biomechanical stress, to heart failure is poorly understood. The mitogen-activated protein kinase p38␣ is a key component of stress response pathways in various types of cells. In this study, we attempted to explore the in vivo physiological functions of p38␣ in hearts. First, we generated mice with floxed p38␣ alleles and crossbred them with mice expressing the Cre recombinase under the control of the ␣-myosin heavy-chain promoter to obtain cardiac-specific p38␣ knockout mice. These cardiac-specific p38␣ knockout mice were born normally, developed to adulthood, were fertile, exhibited a normal life span, and displayed normal global cardiac structure and function. In response to pressure overload to the left ventricle, they developed significant levels of cardiac hypertrophy, as seen in controls, but also developed cardiac dysfunction and heart dilatation. This abnormal response to pressure overload was accompanied by massive cardiac fibrosis and the appearance of apoptotic cardiomyocytes. These results demonstrate that p38␣ plays a critical role in the cardiomyocyte survival pathway in response to pressure overload, while cardiac hypertrophic growth is unaffected despite its dramatic down-regulation.
Sarcolipin (SLN) inhibits the cardiac sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca 2؉ ATPase (SERCA2a) by direct binding and is superinhibitory if it binds through phospholamban (PLN). To determine whether overexpression of SLN in the heart might impair cardiac function, transgenic (TG) mice were generated with cardiac-specific overexpression of NF-SLN (SLN tagged at its N terminus with the FLAG epitope). The level of NF-SLN expression (the NF-SLN͞PLN expression ratio) was equivalent to that which induces profound superinhibition when coexpressed with PLN and SERCA2a in HEK-293 cells. In TG hearts, the apparent affinity of SERCA2a for Ca 2؉ was decreased compared with non-TG littermate control hearts. Invasive hemodynamic and echocardiographic analyses revealed impaired cardiac contractility and ventricular hypertrophy in TG mice. Basal PLN phosphorylation was reduced. In isolated papillary muscle subjected to isometric tension, peak amplitudes of Ca 2؉ transients and peak tensions were reduced, whereas decay times of Ca 2؉ transients and relaxation times of tension were increased in TG mice. Isoproterenol largely restored contractility in papillary muscle and stimulated PLN phosphorylation to wild-type levels in intact hearts. No compensatory changes in expression of SERCA2a, PLN, ryanodine receptor, and calsequestrin were observed in TG hearts. Coimmunoprecipitation indicated that overexpressed NF-SLN was bound to both SERCA2a and PLN, forming a ternary complex. These data suggest that NF-SLN overexpression inhibits SERCA2a through stabilization of SERCA2a-PLN interaction in the absence of PLN phosphorylation and through the inhibition of PLN phosphorylation. Inhibition of SERCA2a impairs contractility and calcium cycling, but responsiveness to -adrenergic agonists may prevent progression to heart failure. to the extracellular space. SERCA2a is regulated by phospholamban (PLN) and can potentially be regulated by a homologous protein, sarcolipin (SLN) (1, 2).PLN is a 52-aa SR membrane protein expressed abundantly in cardiac muscle (3). In its dephosphorylated form, PLN interacts with SERCA2a to inhibit Ca 2ϩ transport by lowering the apparent affinity of SERCA2a for Ca 2ϩ . When PLN is phosphorylated, its inhibitory effect on SERCA2a is relieved. The ability of PLN to regulate SERCA2a activity, thereby regulating the rate of cardiac relaxation and the size of the SR Ca 2ϩ store, makes PLN a crucial regulator of cardiac function (1, 2, 4, 5).SLN is a 31-aa SR membrane protein, which has no obvious phosphorylation site (6). Studies based on coexpression of PLN, SLN, and SERCA in heterologous cell culture show that PLN and SLN have similar ability to inhibit either SERCA1a or SERCA2a (7-9). PLN and SLN can form a binary complex that is superinhibitory, presumably because of the formation of a ternary PLN-SLN-SERCA2a complex (9, 10). Thus, SLN can regulate SERCA through either direct interaction with SERCA or through stabilization of the interaction between SERCA and PLN (10).SLN mRNA is expressed abundantly in human fast-twit...
The Raf/MEK/extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) signaling pathway regulates diverse cellular processes such as proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis and is implicated as an important contributor to the pathogenesis of cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure. To examine the in vivo role of Raf-1 in the heart, we generated cardiac muscle-specific Raf-1-knockout (Raf CKO) mice with Cre-loxP-mediated recombination. The mice demonstrated left ventricular systolic dysfunction and heart dilatation without cardiac hypertrophy or lethality. The Raf CKO mice showed a significant increase in the number of apoptotic cardiomyocytes. The expression level and activation of MEK1/2 or ERK showed no difference, but the kinase activity of apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 (ASK1), JNK, or p38 increased significantly compared with that in controls. The ablation of ASK1 rescued heart dysfunction and dilatation as well as cardiac fibrosis. These results indicate that Raf-1 promotes cardiomyocyte survival through a MEK/ERK-independent mechanism.
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