4.8 Article

Activin A and Follistatin-Like 3 Determine the Susceptibility of Heart to Ischemic Injury

Journal

CIRCULATION
Volume 120, Issue 16, Pages 1606-U101

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.109.872200

Keywords

activin A; apoptosis; follistatin-like 3; myocytes; reperfusion

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [HL77774, HL86785, AG15052, HL81587, HL71563, U54-AR052646]
  2. American Heart Association [0635593T, 0625867T]
  3. EMBO [ASTF 53.00-2009]
  4. British Heart Foundation [PG/08/084/25827] Funding Source: researchfish

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Background-Transforming growth factor-beta family cytokines have diverse actions in the maintenance of cardiac homeostasis. Activin A is a member of this family whose regulation and function in heart are not well understood at a molecular level. Follistatin-like 3 (Fstl3) is an extracellular regulator of activin A protein, and its function in the heart is also unknown. Methods and Results-We analyzed the expression of various transforming growth factor-beta superfamily cytokines and their binding partners in mouse heart. Activin beta A and Fstl3 were upregulated in models of myocardial injury. Overexpression of activin A with an adenoviral vector (Ad-act beta A) or treatment with recombinant activin A protein protected cultured myocytes from hypoxia/reoxygenation-induced apoptosis. Systemic overexpression of activin A in mice by intravenous injection of Ad-act beta A protected hearts from ischemia/reperfusion injury. Activin A induced the expression of Bcl-2, and ablation of Bcl-2 by small interfering RNA abrogated its protective action in myocytes. The protective effect of activin A on cultured myocytes was abolished by treatment with Fstl3 or by a pharmacological activin receptor-like kinase inhibitor. Cardiac-specific Fstl3 knockout mice showed significantly smaller infarcts after ischemia/reperfusion injury that was accompanied by reduced apoptosis. Conclusions-Activin A and Fstl3 are induced in heart by myocardial stress. Activin A protects myocytes from death, and this activity is antagonized by Fstl3. Thus, the relative expression levels of these factors after injury is a determinant of cell survival in the heart. (Circulation. 2009; 120: 1606-1615.)

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