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Cardiac fibroblasts are essential for the adaptive response of the murine heart to pressure overload
Norifumi Takeda, … , Simon J. Conway, Ryozo Nagai
Norifumi Takeda, … , Simon J. Conway, Ryozo Nagai
Published December 21, 2009
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2010;120(1):254-265. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI40295.
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Research Article Cardiology

Cardiac fibroblasts are essential for the adaptive response of the murine heart to pressure overload

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Abstract

Fibroblasts, which are the most numerous cell type in the heart, interact with cardiomyocytes in vitro and affect their function; however, they are considered to play a secondary role in cardiac hypertrophy and failure. Here we have shown that cardiac fibroblasts are essential for the protective and hypertrophic myocardial responses to pressure overload in vivo in mice. Haploinsufficiency of the transcription factor–encoding gene Krüppel-like factor 5 (Klf5) suppressed cardiac fibrosis and hypertrophy elicited by moderate-intensity pressure overload, whereas cardiomyocyte-specific Klf5 deletion did not alter the hypertrophic responses. By contrast, cardiac fibroblast–specific Klf5 deletion ameliorated cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis, indicating that KLF5 in fibroblasts is important for the response to pressure overload and that cardiac fibroblasts are required for cardiomyocyte hypertrophy. High-intensity pressure overload caused severe heart failure and early death in mice with Klf5-null fibroblasts. KLF5 transactivated Igf1 in cardiac fibroblasts, and IGF-1 subsequently acted in a paracrine fashion to induce hypertrophic responses in cardiomyocytes. Igf1 induction was essential for cardioprotective responses, as administration of a peptide inhibitor of IGF-1 severely exacerbated heart failure induced by high-intensity pressure overload. Thus, cardiac fibroblasts play a pivotal role in the myocardial adaptive response to pressure overload, and this role is partly controlled by KLF5. Modulation of cardiac fibroblast function may provide a novel strategy for treating heart failure, with KLF5 serving as an attractive target.

Authors

Norifumi Takeda, Ichiro Manabe, Yuichi Uchino, Kosei Eguchi, Sahohime Matsumoto, Satoshi Nishimura, Takayuki Shindo, Motoaki Sano, Kinya Otsu, Paige Snider, Simon J. Conway, Ryozo Nagai

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Figure 8

An IGF-1 receptor antagonist aggravates heart failure induced by severe pressure overload.

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An IGF-1 receptor antagonist aggravates heart failure induced by severe ...
(A) Kaplan-Meier survival analysis of wild-type mice treated with vehicle or JB1, a peptide IGF-1 receptor antagonist, after HI-TAC. n = 10 in each group. *P < 0.001 versus vehicle. (B) Representative photographs of lungs taken 1 week after the operations. Note the severe lung edema in JB1-treated mice subjected to HI-TAC. (C) Lung weights in vehicle-treated and JB1-treated groups 1 week after the operations. n = 5 in each group. (D) Representative low-magnification views of H&E-stained heart sections 1 week after the operations. Scale bars: 1 mm. (E) Heart weights. (F) Echocardiographic analysis carried out 1 week after the operation. *P < 0.05 versus sham controls in the same treatment group; #P < 0.05 versus vehicle controls subjected to HI-TAC.

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