4.8 Article

Shortening of the Elastic Tandem Immunoglobulin Segment of Titin Leads to Diastolic Dysfunction

Journal

CIRCULATION
Volume 128, Issue 1, Pages 19-28

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.112.001268

Keywords

elasticity; exercise; extracellular matrix; hypertrophy; vascular stiffness

Funding

  1. American Heart Association [0825748G]
  2. National Institutes of Health [T32 HL07249-31, R01HL062881]

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Background Diastolic dysfunction is a poorly understood but clinically pervasive syndrome that is characterized by increased diastolic stiffness. Titin is the main determinant of cellular passive stiffness. However, the physiological role that the tandem immunoglobulin (Ig) segment of titin plays in stiffness generation and whether shortening this segment is sufficient to cause diastolic dysfunction need to be established. Methods and Results We generated a mouse model in which 9 Ig-like domains (Ig3-Ig11) were deleted from the proximal tandem Ig segment of the spring region of titin (IG KO). Exon microarray analysis revealed no adaptations in titin splicing, whereas novel phospho-specific antibodies did not detect changes in titin phosphorylation. Passive myocyte stiffness was increased in the IG KO, and immunoelectron microscopy revealed increased extension of the remaining titin spring segments as the sole likely underlying mechanism. Diastolic stiffness was increased at the tissue and organ levels, with no consistent changes in extracellular matrix composition or extracellular matrix-based passive stiffness, supporting a titin-based mechanism for in vivo diastolic dysfunction. Additionally, IG KO mice have a reduced exercise tolerance, a phenotype often associated with diastolic dysfunction. Conclusions Increased titin-based passive stiffness is sufficient to cause diastolic dysfunction with exercise intolerance.

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