4.5 Article

CIKS (Act1 or TRAF3IP2) mediates Angiotensin-II-induced Interleukin-18 expression, and Nox2-dependent cardiomyocyte hypertrophy

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR AND CELLULAR CARDIOLOGY
Volume 53, Issue 1, Pages 113-124

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.yjmcc.2012.04.009

Keywords

RAAS; NADPH oxidase; Act1; TRAF3IP2; Fibrosis; Cardiac hypertrophy

Funding

  1. Veterans Affairs Office of Research and Development Biomedical Laboratory Research and Development Service Award [1IO1BX000246]
  2. NIH/NHLBI [HL-86787]

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Chronic elevation of angiotensin (Ang)-II can lead to myocardial inflammation, hypertrophy and cardiac failure. The adaptor molecule CIKS (connection to IKK and SAPK/JNK) activates the I kappa B kinase/nuclear factor (NF)-kappa B and JNK/activator protein (AP)-1 pathways in autoimmune and inflammatory diseases. Since Ang-II is a potent activator of NF-kappa B and AP-1, we investigated whether CIKS is critical in Ang-II-mediated cardiac hypertrophy. Here we report that Ang-II induced CIKS mRNA and protein expression, CIKS binding to IKK and JNK perhaps functioning as a scaffold protein, CIKS-dependent IKK/NF-kappa B and JNK/AP-1 activation, p65 and c-Jun phosphorylation and nuclear translocation, NF-kappa B- and AP-1-dependent IL-18 and MMP-9 induction, and hypertrophy of adult cardiomyocytes isolated from WT, but not CIKS-null mice. These results were recapitulated in WT-cardiomyocytes following CIKS knockdown. Infusion of Ang-II for 7 days induced cardiac hypertrophy, increased collagen content, and upregulated CIKS mRNA and protein expression in WT mice, whereas cardiac hypertrophy and collagen deposition were markedly attenuated in the CIKS-null mice, despite a similar increase in systolic blood pressure and DPI-inhibitable superoxide generation in both types of animals. Further, Ang-II-induced IKK/p65 and JNK/c-Jun phosphorylation, NF-kappa B and AP-1 activation, and IL-18 and MMP-9 expression were also markedly attenuated in CIKS-null mice. These results demonstrate that CIKS is critical in Ang-II-induced cardiomyocyte hypertrophy and fibrosis, and that CIKS is an important intermediate in Ang-II-induced redox signaling. CIKS is a potential therapeutic target in cardiac hypertrophy, fibrosis, and congestive heart failure. (c) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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