The miRNA-212/132 family regulates both cardiac hypertrophy and cardiomyocyte autophagy.

  • Ahmet Ucar
  • Shashi K Gupta
  • Jan Fiedler
  • Erdem Erikci
  • Michal Kardasinski
  • Sandor Batkai
  • Seema Dangwal
  • Regalla Kumarswamy
  • Claudia Bang
  • Angelika Holzmann
  • Janet Remke
  • Massimiliano Caprio
  • Claudia Jentzsch
  • Stefan Engelhardt
  • Sabine Geisendorf
  • Carolina Glas
  • Thomas G Hofmann
  • Michelle Nessling
  • Karsten Richter
  • Mario Schiffer
  • Lucie Carrier
  • L Christian Napp
  • Johann Bauersachs
  • Kamal Chowdhury
  • Thomas Thum

Abstract

Pathological growth of cardiomyocytes (hypertrophy) is a major determinant for the development of heart failure, one of the leading medical causes of mortality worldwide. Here we show that the microRNA (miRNA)-212/132 family regulates cardiac hypertrophy and autophagy in cardiomyocytes. Hypertrophic stimuli upregulate cardiomyocyte expression of miR-212 and miR-132, which are both necessary and sufficient to drive the hypertrophic growth of cardiomyocytes. MiR-212/132 null mice are protected from pressure-overload-induced heart failure, whereas cardiomyocyte-specific overexpression of the miR-212/132 family leads to pathological cardiac hypertrophy, heart failure and death in mice. Both miR-212 and miR-132 directly target the anti-hypertrophic and pro-autophagic FoxO3 transcription factor and overexpression of these miRNAs leads to hyperactivation of pro-hypertrophic calcineurin/NFAT signalling and an impaired autophagic response upon starvation. Pharmacological inhibition of miR-132 by antagomir injection rescues cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure in mice, offering a possible therapeutic approach for cardiac failure.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 2012
pubmed 23011132