Abnormal muscle mechanosignaling triggers cardiomyopathy in mice with Marfan syndrome.
Publication/Presentation Date
3-1-2014
Abstract
Patients with Marfan syndrome (MFS), a multisystem disorder caused by mutations in the gene encoding the extracellular matrix (ECM) protein fibrillin 1, are unusually vulnerable to stress-induced cardiac dysfunction. The prevailing view is that MFS-associated cardiac dysfunction is the result of aortic and/or valvular disease. Here, we determined that dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in fibrillin 1-deficient mice is a primary manifestation resulting from ECM-induced abnormal mechanosignaling by cardiomyocytes. MFS mice displayed spontaneous emergence of an enlarged and dysfunctional heart, altered physical properties of myocardial tissue, and biochemical evidence of chronic mechanical stress, including increased angiotensin II type I receptor (AT1R) signaling and abated focal adhesion kinase (FAK) activity. Partial fibrillin 1 gene inactivation in cardiomyocytes was sufficient to precipitate DCM in otherwise phenotypically normal mice. Consistent with abnormal mechanosignaling, normal cardiac size and function were restored in MFS mice treated with an AT1R antagonist and in MFS mice lacking AT1R or β-arrestin 2, but not in MFS mice treated with an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or lacking angiotensinogen. Conversely, DCM associated with abnormal AT1R and FAK signaling was the sole abnormality in mice that were haploinsufficient for both fibrillin 1 and β1 integrin. Collectively, these findings implicate fibrillin 1 in the physiological adaptation of cardiac muscle to elevated workload.
Volume
124
Issue
3
First Page
1329
Last Page
1339
ISSN
1558-8238
Published In/Presented At
Cook, J. R., Carta, L., Bénard, L., Chemaly, E. R., Chiu, E., Rao, S. K., Hampton, T. G., Yurchenco, P., GenTAC Registry Consortium, Costa, K. D., Hajjar, R. J., & Ramirez, F. (2014). Abnormal muscle mechanosignaling triggers cardiomyopathy in mice with Marfan syndrome. The Journal of clinical investigation, 124(3), 1329–1339. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI71059
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
24531548
Department(s)
Department of Surgery
Document Type
Article