4.7 Article

Gene Therapy With the N-Terminus of Junctophilin-2 Improves Heart Failure in Mice

Journal

CIRCULATION RESEARCH
Volume 130, Issue 9, Pages 1306-1317

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.121.320680

Keywords

genetic therapy; heart failure; hypertrophy; junctophilin

Funding

  1. Albaghdadi Family Medical Foundation
  2. American Heart Association
  3. National Heart, Lung and Blood Institutes
  4. Department of Veterans Affairs of the United States
  5. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [S10 OD019941]

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This study demonstrates the potential of JP2NT gene therapy in attenuating transcriptional remodeling and development of heart failure induced by cardiac stress. The findings suggest that JP2NT gene therapy may serve as a novel therapeutic approach for treating hypertrophy and heart failure.
Background: Transcriptional remodeling is known to contribute to heart failure (HF). Targeting stress-dependent gene expression mechanisms may represent a clinically relevant gene therapy option. We recently uncovered a salutary mechanism in the heart whereby JP2 (junctophilin-2), an essential component of the excitation-contraction coupling apparatus, is site-specifically cleaved and releases an N-terminal fragment (JP2NT [N-terminal fragment of JP2]) that translocates into the nucleus and functions as a transcriptional repressor of HF-related genes. This study aims to determine whether JP2NT can be leveraged by gene therapy techniques for attenuating HF progression in a preclinical pressure overload model. Methods: We intraventricularly injected adeno-associated virus (AAV) (2/9) vectors expressing eGFP (enhanced green fluorescent protein), JP2NT, or DNA-binding deficient JP2NT (JP2NT(Delta bNLS/ARR)) into neonatal mice and induced cardiac stress by transaortic constriction (TAC) 9 weeks later. We also treated mice with established moderate HF from TAC stress with either AAV-JP2NT or AAV-eGFP. RNA-sequencing analysis was used to reveal changes in hypertrophic and HF-related gene transcription by JP2NT gene therapy after TAC. Echocardiography, confocal imaging, and histology were performed to evaluate heart function and pathological myocardial remodeling following stress. Results: Mice preinjected with AAV-JP2NT exhibited ameliorated cardiac remodeling following TAC. The JP2NT DNA-binding domain is required for cardioprotection as its deletion within the AAV-JP2NT vector prevented improvement in TAC-induced cardiac dysfunction. Functional and histological data suggest that JP2NT gene therapy after the onset of cardiac dysfunction is effective at slowing the progression of HF. RNA-sequencing analysis further revealed a broad reversal of hypertrophic and HF-related gene transcription by JP2NT overexpression after TAC. Conclusions: Our prevention- and intervention-based approaches here demonstrated that AAV-mediated delivery of JP2NT into the myocardium can attenuate stress-induced transcriptional remodeling and the development of HF when administered either before or after cardiac stress initiation. Our data indicate that JP2NT gene therapy holds great potential as a novel therapeutic for treating hypertrophy and HF.

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