Myocyte-enriched calcineurin-interacting protein, MCIP1, inhibits cardiac hypertrophy in vivo

BA Rothermel, TA McKinsey, RB Vega… - Proceedings of the …, 2001 - National Acad Sciences
BA Rothermel, TA McKinsey, RB Vega, RL Nicol, P Mammen, J Yang, CL Antos, JM Shelton
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2001National Acad Sciences
Signaling events controlled by calcineurin promote cardiac hypertrophy, but the degree to
which such pathways are required to transduce the effects of various hypertrophic stimuli
remains uncertain. In particular, the administration of immunosuppressive drugs that inhibit
calcineurin has inconsistent effects in blocking cardiac hypertrophy in various animal
models. As an alternative approach to inhibiting calcineurin in the hearts of intact animals,
transgenic mice were engineered to overexpress a human cDNA encoding the calcineurin …
Signaling events controlled by calcineurin promote cardiac hypertrophy, but the degree to which such pathways are required to transduce the effects of various hypertrophic stimuli remains uncertain. In particular, the administration of immunosuppressive drugs that inhibit calcineurin has inconsistent effects in blocking cardiac hypertrophy in various animal models. As an alternative approach to inhibiting calcineurin in the hearts of intact animals, transgenic mice were engineered to overexpress a human cDNA encoding the calcineurin-binding protein, myocyte-enriched calcineurin-interacting protein-1 (hMCIP1) under control of the cardiac-specific, α-myosin heavy chain promoter (α-MHC). In unstressed mice, forced expression of hMCIP1 resulted in a 5–10% decline in cardiac mass relative to wild-type littermates, but otherwise produced no apparent structural or functional abnormalities. However, cardiac-specific expression of hMCIP1 inhibited cardiac hypertrophy, reinduction of fetal gene expression, and progression to dilated cardiomyopathy that otherwise result from expression of a constitutively active form of calcineurin. Expression of the hMCIP1 transgene also inhibited hypertrophic responses to β-adrenergic receptor stimulation or exercise training. These results demonstrate that levels of hMCIP1 producing no apparent deleterious effects in cells of the normal heart are sufficient to inhibit several forms of cardiac hypertrophy, and suggest an important role for calcineurin signaling in diverse forms of cardiac hypertrophy. The future development of measures to increase expression or activity of MCIP proteins selectively within the heart may have clinical value for prevention of heart failure.
National Acad Sciences