RESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Cardiac hypertrophic growth is mediated by robust changes in gene expression and changes that underlie the increase in cardiomyocyte size. The former is regulated by RNA polymerase II (pol II) de novo recruitment or loss; the latter involves incremental increases in the transcriptional elongation activity of pol II that is preassembled at the transcription start site. The differential regulation of these distinct processes by transcription factors remains unknown. Forkhead box protein O1 (FoxO1) is an insulin-sensitive transcription factor that is also regulated by hypertrophic stimuli in the heart. However, the scope of its gene regulation remains unexplored. METHODS: To address this, we performed FoxO1 chromatin immunoprecipitation-deep sequencing in mouse hearts after 7 days of isoproterenol injections (3 mg·kg-1·mg-1), transverse aortic constriction, or vehicle injection/sham surgery. RESULTS: Our data demonstrate increases in FoxO1 chromatin binding during cardiac hypertrophic growth, which positively correlate with extent of hypertrophy. To assess the role of FoxO1 on pol II dynamics and gene expression, the FoxO1 chromatin immunoprecipitation-deep sequencing results were aligned with those of pol II chromatin immunoprecipitation-deep sequencing across the chromosomal coordinates of sham- or transverse aortic constriction-operated mouse hearts. This uncovered that FoxO1 binds to the promoters of 60% of cardiac-expressed genes at baseline and 91% after transverse aortic constriction. FoxO1 binding is increased in genes regulated by pol II de novo recruitment, loss, or pause-release. In vitro, endothelin-1- and, in vivo, pressure overload-induced cardiomyocyte hypertrophic growth is prevented with FoxO1 knockdown or deletion, which was accompanied by reductions in inducible genes, including Comtd1 in vitro and Fstl1 and Uck2 in vivo. CONCLUSIONS: Together, our data suggest that FoxO1 may mediate cardiac hypertrophic growth via regulation of pol II de novo recruitment and pause-release; the latter represents the majority (59%) of FoxO1-bound, pol II-regulated genes after pressure overload. These findings demonstrate the breadth of transcriptional regulation by FoxO1 during cardiac hypertrophy, information that is essential for its therapeutic targeting.
Asunto(s)
Cardiomegalia/metabolismo , Proteínas Relacionadas con la Folistatina/metabolismo , Proteína Forkhead Box O1/metabolismo , Uridina Quinasa/metabolismo , Animales , Cardiomegalia/genética , Proteínas Relacionadas con la Folistatina/genética , Proteína Forkhead Box O1/genética , Ratones , ARN Polimerasa II/genética , ARN Polimerasa II/metabolismo , Uridina Quinasa/genéticaRESUMEN
Rationale: Systemic inflammation compromises the reparative properties of endothelial progenitor cell (EPC) and their exosomes on myocardial repair, although the underlying mechanism of loss of function of exosomes from inflamed EPCs is still obscure. Objective: To determine the mechanisms of IL-10 (interleukin-10) deficient-EPC-derived exosome dysfunction in myocardial repair and to investigate if modification of specific exosome cargo can rescue reparative activity. Methods and Results: Using IL-10 knockout mice mimicking systemic inflammation condition, we compared therapeutic effect and protein cargo of exosomes isolated from wild-type EPC and IL-10 knockout EPC. In a mouse model of myocardial infarction (MI), wild-type EPC-derived exosome treatment significantly improved left ventricle cardiac function, inhibited cell apoptosis, reduced MI scar size, and promoted post-MI neovascularization, whereas IL-10 knockout EPC-derived exosome treatment showed diminished and opposite effects. Mass spectrometry analysis revealed wild-type EPC-derived exosome and IL-10 knockout EPC-derived exosome contain different protein expression pattern. Among differentially expressed proteins, ILK (integrin-linked kinase) was highly enriched in both IL-10 knockout EPC-derived exosome as well as TNFα (tumor necrosis factor-α)-treated mouse cardiac endothelial cell-derived exosomes (TNFα inflamed mouse cardiac endothelial cell-derived exosome). ILK-enriched exosomes activated NF-κB (nuclear factor κB) pathway and NF-κB-dependent gene transcription in recipient endothelial cells and this effect was partly attenuated through ILK knockdown in exosomes. Intriguingly, ILK knockdown in IL-10 knockout EPC-derived exosome significantly rescued their reparative dysfunction in myocardial repair, improved left ventricle cardiac function, reduced MI scar size, and enhanced post-MI neovascularization in MI mouse model. Conclusions: IL-10 deficiency/inflammation alters EPC-derived exosome function, content and therapeutic effect on myocardial repair by upregulating ILK enrichment in exosomes, and ILK-mediated activation of NF-κB pathway in recipient cells, whereas ILK knockdown in exosomes attenuates NF-κB activation and reduces inflammatory response. Our study provides new understanding of how inflammation may alter stem cell-exosome-mediated cardiac repair and identifies ILK as a target kinase for improving progenitor cell exosome-based cardiac therapies.