4.6 Article

NULP1 Alleviates Cardiac Hypertrophy by Suppressing NFAT3 Transcriptional Activity

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.120.016419

Keywords

aortic banding; heart failure; NFAT3 signaling; nuclear localized protein 1; pathological cardiac hypertrophy

Funding

  1. Youth Program of National Natural Science Foundation of China [81600387]
  2. National Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars [81425005]
  3. Key Project of the National Natural Science Foundation [81330005, 81630011]
  4. National Key Research and Development Program [2013YQ030923-05, 2016YFF0101500]
  5. Key Collaborative Project of the National Natural Science Foundation [91639304]

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Background The development of pathological cardiac hypertrophy involves the coordination of a series of transcription activators and repressors, while their interplay to trigger pathological gene reprogramming remains unclear. NULP1 (nuclear localized protein 1) is a member of the basic helix-loop-helix family of transcription factors and its biological functions in pathological cardiac hypertrophy are barely understood. Methods and Results Immunoblot and immunostaining analyses showed that NULP1 expression was consistently reduced in the failing hearts of patients and hypertrophic mouse hearts and rat cardiomyocytes. Nulp1 knockout exacerbates aortic banding-induced cardiac hypertrophy pathology, which was significantly blunted by transgenic overexpression of Nulp1. Signal pathway screening revealed the nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT) pathway to be dramatically suppressed by NULP1. Coimmunoprecipitation showed that NULP1 directly interacted with the topologically associating domain of NFAT3 via its C-terminal region, which was sufficient to suppress NFAT3 transcriptional activity. Inactivation of the NFAT pathway by VIVIT peptides in vivo rescued the aggravated pathogenesis of cardiac hypertrophy resulting from Nulp1 deficiency. Conclusions NULP1 is an endogenous suppressor of NFAT3 signaling under hypertrophic stress and thus negatively regulates the pathogenesis of cardiac hypertrophy. Targeting overactivated NFAT by NULP1 may be a novel therapeutic strategy for the treatment of pathological cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure.

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