4.8 Article

Cardiac fibroblasts regulate the development of heart failure via Htra3-TGF-β-IGFBP7 axis

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-30630-y

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Japan Foundation for Applied Enzymology
  2. SENSHIN Medical Research Foundation
  3. Kanae Foundation for the Promotion of Medical Science
  4. MSD Life Science Foundation
  5. Tokyo Biomedical Research Foundation
  6. Astellas Foundation for Research on Metabolic Disorders
  7. Novartis Foundation (Japan) for the Promotion of Science
  8. Japanese Circulation Society
  9. Takeda Science Foundation
  10. Uehara Memorial Foundation
  11. AMED [JP22ek0210152, JP21gm6210010, JP20bm0704026, JP22ek0210141, JP22ek0109440, JP22ek0109487, JP22gm0810013, JP22km0405209, JP21ek0210118, JP21ek0109406, JP22ek0109543, JP22ek0109569, JP21tm0724601, JP22ama121016, JP22ek0210172, JP22ek0210167]
  12. JST FOREST Program [21466223]
  13. Cell Science Research Foundation

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This study identifies Htra3 as a critical regulator of cardiac fibrosis and heart failure by maintaining the identity of quiescent cardiac fibroblasts and degrading TGF-beta. These findings provide new insights into the pathogenesis of heart failure and suggest Htra3 as a potential therapeutic target.
Cardiac fibrosis is a hallmark of heart failure. Here the authors use single-cell RNA-sequencing, spatial transcriptomics, and genetic manipulations, to show that Htra3 regulates cardiac fibrosis by keeping fibroblasts quiescent and by degrading TGF-beta. Tissue fibrosis and organ dysfunction are hallmarks of age-related diseases including heart failure, but it remains elusive whether there is a common pathway to induce both events. Through single-cell RNA-seq, spatial transcriptomics, and genetic perturbation, we elucidate that high-temperature requirement A serine peptidase 3 (Htra3) is a critical regulator of cardiac fibrosis and heart failure by maintaining the identity of quiescent cardiac fibroblasts through degrading transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta). Pressure overload downregulates expression of Htra3 in cardiac fibroblasts and activated TGF-beta signaling, which induces not only cardiac fibrosis but also heart failure through DNA damage accumulation and secretory phenotype induction in failing cardiomyocytes. Overexpression of Htra3 in the heart inhibits TGF-beta signaling and ameliorates cardiac dysfunction after pressure overload. Htra3-regulated induction of spatio-temporal cardiac fibrosis and cardiomyocyte secretory phenotype are observed specifically in infarct regions after myocardial infarction. Integrative analyses of single-cardiomyocyte transcriptome and plasma proteome in human reveal that IGFBP7, which is a cytokine downstream of TGF-beta and secreted from failing cardiomyocytes, is the most predictable marker of advanced heart failure. These findings highlight the roles of cardiac fibroblasts in regulating cardiomyocyte homeostasis and cardiac fibrosis through the Htra3-TGF-beta-IGFBP7 pathway, which would be a therapeutic target for heart failure.

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