4.7 Article

Amino acid primed mTOR activity is essential for heart regeneration

Journal

ISCIENCE
Volume 25, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2021.103574

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [1P01GM081619, R01GM097372, R01GM97372-03S1, R01GM083867]
  2. NHLBI Progenitor Cell Biology Consortium [U01HL099997, UO1HL099993, R01HL135143, R01HL146436, P30AR074990, R44HL149566]
  3. University of Washington's Proteomics Resource [UWPR95794]
  4. Bioengineering Cardiovascular Training Grant [T32-EB1650]
  5. Experimental Pathology of Cardiovascular Disease Training Grant [T32-HL007312]
  6. Washington State, Wellstone Muscular Dystrophy Cooperative Research Center [U54AR065139]
  7. NSERC Alexander Grahm Bell Graduate Scholarship
  8. Washington state

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The ability of zebrafish and neonatal mouse myocardial cells to regenerate the heart through dedifferentiation and proliferation is explored. The study demonstrates a unique metabolic state and mitochondrial changes that contribute to this regenerative capability.
Heart disease is the leading cause of death with no method to repair damaged myocardium due to the limited proliferative capacity of adult cardiomyocytes. Curiously, mouse neonates and zebrafish can regenerate their hearts via cardiomyocyte de-differentiation and proliferation. However, a molecular mechanism of why these cardiomyocytes can re-enter cell cycle is poorly understood. Here, we identify a unique metabolic state that primes adult zebrafish and neonatal mouse ventricular cardiomyocytes to proliferate. Zebrafish and neonatal mouse hearts display elevated glutamine levels, predisposing them to amino-acid-driven activation of TOR, and that TOR activation is required for zebrafish cardicmyocyte regeneration in vivo. Through a multi-omics approach with cellular validation we identify metabolic and mitochondrial changes during the first week of regeneration. These data suggest that regeneration of zebrafish myocardium is driven by metabolic remodeling and reveals a unique metabolic regulator, TOR-primed state, in which zebrafish and mammalian cardiomyocytes are regeneration competent.

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