4.6 Article

Human Resistin Induces Cardiac Dysfunction in Pulmonary Hypertension

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.122.027621

Keywords

cardiac remodeling; HMGB1; inflammation; RELM alpha; right ventricle

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This study found that overexpression of cardiac-specific Hresistin is sufficient to cause cardiac dysfunction and remodeling. Activation of Hresistin triggers inflammation in heart tissues and leads to right ventricular hypertrophy and failure. However, the researchers also discovered that protection from hypertrophy and failure can be achieved by generating an anti-Hresistin human antibody.
BackgroundCardiac failure is the primary cause of death in most patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PH). As pleiotropic cytokines, human resistin (Hresistin) and its rodent homolog, resistin-like molecule alpha, are mechanistically critical to pulmonary vascular remodeling in PH. However, it is still unclear whether activation of these resistin-like molecules can directly cause PH-associated cardiac dysfunction and remodeling. Methods and ResultsIn this study, we detected Hresistin protein in right ventricular (RV) tissue of patients with PH and elevated resistin-like molecule expression in RV tissues of rodents with RV hypertrophy and failure. In a humanized mouse model, cardiac-specific Hresistin overexpression was sufficient to cause cardiac dysfunction and remodeling. Dilated hearts exhibited reduced force development and decreased intracellular Ca2+ transients. In the RV tissues overexpressing Hresistin, the impaired contractility was associated with the suppression of protein kinase A and AMP-activated protein kinase. Mechanistically, Hresistin activation triggered the inflammation mediated by signaling of the key damage-associated molecular pattern molecule high-mobility group box 1, and subsequently induced pro-proliferative Ki67 in RV tissues of the transgenic mice. Intriguingly, an anti-Hresistin human antibody that we generated protected the myocardium from hypertrophy and failure in the rodent PH models. ConclusionsOur data indicate that Hresistin is expressed in heart tissues and plays a role in the development of RV dysfunction and maladaptive remodeling through its immunoregulatory activities. Targeting this signaling to modulate cardiac inflammation may offer a promising strategy to treat PH-associated RV hypertrophy and failure in humans.

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