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βIV-Spectrin/STAT3 complex regulates fibroblast phenotype, fibrosis, and cardiac function
Nehal J. Patel, Drew M. Nassal, Amara D. Greer-Short, Sathya D. Unudurthi, Benjamin W. Scandling, Daniel Gratz, Xianyao Xu, Anuradha Kalyanasundaram, Vadim V. Fedorov, Federica Accornero, Peter J. Mohler, Keith J. Gooch, Thomas J. Hund
Nehal J. Patel, Drew M. Nassal, Amara D. Greer-Short, Sathya D. Unudurthi, Benjamin W. Scandling, Daniel Gratz, Xianyao Xu, Anuradha Kalyanasundaram, Vadim V. Fedorov, Federica Accornero, Peter J. Mohler, Keith J. Gooch, Thomas J. Hund
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Research Article Cardiology Cell biology

βIV-Spectrin/STAT3 complex regulates fibroblast phenotype, fibrosis, and cardiac function

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Abstract

Increased fibrosis is a characteristic remodeling response to biomechanical and neurohumoral stress and a determinant of cardiac mechanical and electrical dysfunction in disease. Stress-induced activation of cardiac fibroblasts (CFs) is a critical step in the fibrotic response, although the precise sequence of events underlying activation of these critical cells in vivo remain unclear. Here, we tested the hypothesis that a βIV-spectrin/STAT3 complex is essential for maintenance of a quiescent phenotype (basal nonactivated state) in CFs. We reported increased fibrosis, decreased cardiac function, and electrical impulse conduction defects in genetic and acquired mouse models of βIV-spectrin deficiency. Loss of βIV-spectrin function promoted STAT3 nuclear accumulation and transcriptional activity, and it altered gene expression and CF activation. Furthermore, we demonstrate that a quiescent phenotype may be restored in βIV-spectrin–deficient fibroblasts by expressing a βIV-spectrin fragment including the STAT3-binding domain or through pharmacological STAT3 inhibition. We found that in vivo STAT3 inhibition abrogates fibrosis and cardiac dysfunction in the setting of global βIV-spectrin deficiency. Finally, we demonstrate that fibroblast-specific deletion of βIV-spectrin is sufficient to induce fibrosis and decreased cardiac function. We propose that the βIV-spectrin/STAT3 complex is a determinant of fibroblast phenotype and fibrosis, with implications for remodeling response in cardiovascular disease (CVD).

Authors

Nehal J. Patel, Drew M. Nassal, Amara D. Greer-Short, Sathya D. Unudurthi, Benjamin W. Scandling, Daniel Gratz, Xianyao Xu, Anuradha Kalyanasundaram, Vadim V. Fedorov, Federica Accornero, Peter J. Mohler, Keith J. Gooch, Thomas J. Hund

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Figure 1

Cardiac mechanical and electrical dysfunction in the setting of βIV-spectrin deficiency.

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Cardiac mechanical and electrical dysfunction in the setting of βIV-spec...
(A) Representative echocardiograms from WT and qv4J at baseline and from WT following 6 weeks of transaortic constriction (TAC) animals. (B) Summary data (mean ± SEM) for echocardiographic features. n = 5 animals for all groups; *P < 0.05 by 1-way ANOVA and Holm-Sidak post hoc pairwise comparison. (C) Representative activation maps of isolated, Langendorff perfused hearts during S1 pacing (cycle length = 150 ms). (D) Summary data (mean ± SEM) of conduction velocity in longitudinal (long) and transverse (trans) directions and provided in units of m/s. n = 10 hearts for WT and qv4J and n = 6 for WT TAC; *P < 0.05 by 1-way ANOVA and Holm-Sidak post hoc pairwise comparison. (E) Optically recorded action potentials during programmed stimulation (S1S2 protocol) in isolated, Langendorff perfused hearts in WT baseline, qv4J baseline, and WT TAC (Scale bar: 200 ms). Red arrow indicates initiation of S2 stimulus. Representative traces are shown for each heart at the longest S1S2 interval that resulted in tachycardia (demonstrated for qv4J and WT TAC) or shortest S1S2 interval with successful capture (demonstrated for WT). (F) Summary data of ventricular tachycardia (VT) incidence following S1S2 pacing in WT baseline, qv4J baseline, and WT TAC hearts. Inducibility was assessed over a range of S1S2 intervals, as described in Methods. n = 10 hearts for WT and qv4J and n = 6 for WT TAC; *P < 0.05 by χ2 test.

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