| Literature DB >> 30842316 |
Jason D Roh1, Ryan Hobson1, Vinita Chaudhari1, Pablo Quintero2, Ashish Yeri1, Mark Benson2, Chunyang Xiao1, Daniel Zlotoff1, Vassilios Bezzerides3, Nicholas Houstis1, Colin Platt1, Federico Damilano1, Brian R Lindman4, Sammy Elmariah1, Michael Biersmith5, Se-Jin Lee6,7, Christine E Seidman8,9,10, Jonathan G Seidman8, Robert E Gerszten2, Estelle Lach-Trifilieff11, David J Glass12, Anthony Rosenzweig13.
Abstract
Activin type II receptor (ActRII) ligands have been implicated in muscle wasting in aging and disease. However, the role of these ligands and ActRII signaling in the heart remains unclear. Here, we investigated this catabolic pathway in human aging and heart failure (HF) using circulating follistatin-like 3 (FSTL3) as a potential indicator of systemic ActRII activity. FSTL3 is a downstream regulator of ActRII signaling, whose expression is up-regulated by the major ActRII ligands, activin A, circulating growth differentiation factor-8 (GDF8), and GDF11. In humans, we found that circulating FSTL3 increased with aging, frailty, and HF severity, correlating with an increase in circulating activins. In mice, increasing circulating activin A increased cardiac ActRII signaling and FSTL3 expression, as well as impaired cardiac function. Conversely, ActRII blockade with either clinical-stage inhibitors or genetic ablation reduced cardiac ActRII signaling while restoring or preserving cardiac function in multiple models of HF induced by aging, sarcomere mutation, or pressure overload. Using unbiased RNA sequencing, we show that activin A, GDF8, and GDF11 all induce a similar pathologic profile associated with up-regulation of the proteasome pathway in mammalian cardiomyocytes. The E3 ubiquitin ligase, Smurf1, was identified as a key downstream effector of activin-mediated ActRII signaling, which increased proteasome-dependent degradation of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase (SERCA2a), a critical determinant of cardiomyocyte function. Together, our findings suggest that increased activin/ActRII signaling links aging and HF pathobiology and that targeted inhibition of this catabolic pathway holds promise as a therapeutic strategy for multiple forms of HF.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30842316 PMCID: PMC7124007 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aau8680
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 17.956