4.8 Article

GRK5 is a regulator of fibroblast activation and cardiac fibrosis

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2012854118

Keywords

fibrosis; GRK5; heart failure

Funding

  1. NIH [P01 HL091799, P01 HL075443, F30 HL143953]

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Pathological remodeling of the heart in chronic heart failure is linked to structural changes perpetuated by cardiac fibroblasts, with GRK5 playing a key role in regulating fibroblast activation and cardiac fibrosis. GRK5 inhibition shows potential beneficial effects in cardiac disease by preventing fibroblast activation and reducing fibrosis and hypertrophy.
Pathological remodeling of the heart is a hallmark of chronic heart failure (HF) and these structural changes further perpetuate the disease. Cardiac fibroblasts are the critical cell type that is responsible for maintaining the structural integrity of the heart. Stress conditions, such as a myocardial infarction (MI), can activate quiescent fibroblasts into synthetic and contractile myofibroblasts. G protein-coupled receptor kinase 5 (GRK5) is an important mediator of cardiovascular homeostasis through dampening of GPCR signaling, and is expressed in the heart and up-regulated in human HF. Of note, GRK5 has been demonstrated to translocate to the nucleus in cardiomyocytes in a calcium-calmodulin (Ca2+-CAM)-dependent manner, promoting hypertrophic gene transcription through activation of nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT). Interestingly, NFAT is also involved in fibroblast activation. GRK5 is highly expressed and active in cardiac fibroblasts; however, its pathophysiological role in these crucial cardiac cells is unknown. We demonstrate using adult cardiac fibroblasts that genetic deletion of GRK5 inhibits angiotensin II (AngII)-mediated fibroblast activation. Fibroblast-specific deletion of GRK5 in mice led to decreased fibrosis and cardiac hypertrophy after chronic Angll infusion or after ischemic injury compared to nontransgenic littermate controls (NLC5). Mechanistically, we show that nuclear translocation of GRK5 is involved in fibroblast activation. These data demonstrate that GRK5 is a regulator of fibroblast activation in vitro and cardiac fibrosis in vivo. This adds to previously published data which demonstrate the potential beneficial effects of GRK5 inhibition in the context of cardiac disease.

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