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392
result(s) for
"infarct healing"
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Follistatin‐like 1 promotes cardiac fibroblast activation and protects the heart from rupture
by
Shimizu, Ippei
,
van den Hoff, Maurice J
,
Walsh, Kenneth
in
Animal models
,
Animals
,
Birefringence
2016
Follistatin‐like 1 (Fstl1) is a secreted protein that is acutely induced in heart following myocardial infarction (MI). In this study, we investigated cell type‐specific regulation of Fstl1 and its function in a murine model of MI. Fstl1 was robustly expressed in fibroblasts and myofibroblasts in the infarcted area compared to cardiac myocytes. The conditional ablation of Fstl1 in S100a4‐expressing fibroblast lineage cells (Fstl1‐cfKO mice) led to a reduction in injury‐induced Fstl1 expression and increased mortality due to cardiac rupture during the acute phase. Cardiac rupture was associated with a diminished number of myofibroblasts and decreased expression of extracellular matrix proteins. The infarcts of Fstl1‐cfKO mice displayed weaker birefringence, indicative of thin and loosely packed collagen. Mechanistically, the migratory and proliferative capabilities of cardiac fibroblasts were attenuated by endogenous Fstl1 ablation. The activation of cardiac fibroblasts by Fstl1 was mediated by ERK1/2 but not Smad2/3 signaling. This study reveals that Fstl1 is essential for the acute repair of the infarcted myocardium and that stimulation of early fibroblast activation is a novel function of Fstl1.
Synopsis
The secreted glycoprotein Fstl1 is found to be robustly expressed in fibroblasts and myofibroblasts in the infarcted heart. Fstl1 is essential for the acute repair of the infarcted myocardium, and stimulation of early cardiac fibroblast activation is a novel function of Fstl1.
Multiple lines of evidence show that cardiac fibroblasts are a major source of Fstl1 production in the injured heart.
The major phenotype of fibroblast‐specific Fstl1 deficiency is cardiac rupture and mortality in the myocardial infarction model.
Mechanistically, Fstl1 does not directly affect myofibroblast differentiation, but functions at an earlier stage of fibroblast activation, promoting the proliferation and migration of this cell type.
Graphical Abstract
The secreted glycoprotein Fstl1 is found to be robustly expressed in fibroblasts and myofibroblasts in the infarcted heart. Fstl1 is essential for the acute repair of the infarcted myocardium, and stimulation of early cardiac fibroblast activation is a novel function of Fstl1.
Journal Article
The time‐of‐day of myocardial infarction onset affects healing through oscillations in cardiac neutrophil recruitment
2016
Myocardial infarction (MI) is the leading cause of death in Western countries. Epidemiological studies show acute MI to be more prevalent in the morning and to be associated with a poorer outcome in terms of mortality and recovery. The mechanisms behind this association are not fully understood. Here, we report that circadian oscillations of neutrophil recruitment to the heart determine infarct size, healing, and cardiac function after MI. Preferential cardiac neutrophil recruitment during the active phase (Zeitgeber time, ZT13) was paralleled by enhanced myeloid progenitor production, increased circulating numbers of CXCR2
hi
neutrophils as well as upregulated cardiac adhesion molecule and chemokine expression. MI at ZT13 resulted in significantly higher cardiac neutrophil infiltration compared to ZT5, which was inhibited by CXCR2 antagonism or neutrophil‐specific CXCR2 knockout. Limiting exaggerated neutrophilic inflammation at this time point significantly reduced the infarct size and improved cardiac function.
Synopsis
Expression levels of chemokine receptor CXCR2 on circulating neutrophils exhibit diurnal oscillations. This causes time‐of‐day‐dependent variations in the number of neutrophils infiltrating the heart after myocardial infarction, with major consequences for infarction healing.
During the sleep‐to‐wake transition period, myeloid progenitor production in the bone marrow is enhanced and the heart expresses higher levels of neutrophil chemoattractants and adhesion molecules.
A myocardial infarction at this time point leads to excessive cardiac neutrophil recruitment, larger infarct size, and worsened heart function.
The enhanced cardiac neutrophil infiltration after myocardial infarction onset during the sleep‐to‐wake transition period is CXCR2‐dependent.
Graphical Abstract
Expression levels of chemokine receptor CXCR2 on circulating neutrophils exhibit diurnal oscillations. This causes time‐of‐day‐dependent variations in the number of neutrophils infiltrating the heart after myocardial infarction, with major consequences for infarction healing.
Journal Article
Effect of Interventions in WNT Signaling on Healing of Cardiac Injury: A Systematic Review
2021
The wound healing that follows myocardial infarction is a complex process involving multiple mechanisms, such as inflammation, angiogenesis and fibrosis. In the last two decades, the involvement of WNT signaling has been extensively studied and effects on virtually all aspects of this wound healing have been reported. However, as often is the case in a newly emerging field, inconsistent and sometimes even contradictory findings have been reported. The aim of this systematic review is to provide a comprehensive overview of studies in which the effect of interventions in WNT signaling were investigated in in vivo models of cardiac injury. To this end, we used different search engines to perform a systematic search of the literature using the key words “WNT and myocardial and infarction”. We categorized the interventions according to their place in the WNT signaling pathway (ligand, receptor, destruction complex or nuclear level). The most consistent improvements of the wound healing response were observed in studies in which the acylation of WNT proteins was inhibited by administering porcupine inhibitors, by inhibiting of the downstream glycogen synthase kinase-3β (GSK3β) and by intervening in the β-catenin-mediated gene transcription. Interestingly, in several of these studies, evidence was presented for activation of cardiomyocyte proliferation around the infarct area. These findings indicate that inhibition of WNT signaling can play a valuable role in the repair of cardiac injury, thereby improving cardiac function and preventing the development of heart failure.
Journal Article
Intermittent pacing therapy favorably modulates infarct remodeling
by
Prinzen, Frits W.
,
Blankesteijn, W. Matthijs
,
Uitterdijk, André
in
Animals
,
Cardiac Pacing, Artificial - methods
,
Cardiology
2017
Despite early revascularization, remodeling and dysfunction of the left ventricle (LV) after acute myocardial infarction (AMI) remain important therapeutic targets. Intermittent pacing therapy (IPT) of the LV can limit infarct size, when applied during early reperfusion. However, the effects of IPT on post-AMI LV remodeling and infarct healing are unknown. We therefore investigated the effects of IPT on global LV remodeling and infarct geometry in swine with a 3-day old AMI. For this purpose, fifteen pigs underwent 2 h ligation of the left circumflex coronary artery followed by reperfusion. An epicardial pacing lead was implanted in the peri-infarct zone. After three days, global LV remodeling and infarct geometry were assessed using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Animals were stratified into MI control and IPT groups. Thirty-five days post-AMI, follow-up MRI was obtained and myofibroblast content, markers of extracellular matrix (ECM) turnover and Wnt/frizzled signaling in infarct and non-infarct control tissue were studied. Results showed that IPT had no significant effect on global LV remodeling, function or infarct mass, but modulated infarct healing. In MI control pigs, infarct mass reduction was principally due to a 26.2 ± 4.4% reduction in infarct thickness (
P
≤ 0.05), whereas in IPT pigs it was mainly due to a 35.7 ± 4.5% decrease in the number of infarct segments (
P
≤ 0.05), with no significant change in infarct thickness. Myofibroblast content of the infarct zone was higher in IPT (10.9 ± 2.1%) compared to MI control (5.4 ± 1.6%;
P
≤ 0.05). Higher myofibroblast presence did not coincide with alterations in expression of genes involved in ECM turnover or Wnt/frizzled signaling at 5 weeks follow-up. Taken together, IPT limited infarct expansion and altered infarct composition, showing that IPT influences remodeling of the infarct zone, likely by increasing regional myofibroblast content.
Journal Article
Therapeutic drugs during healing after myocardial infarction modify infarct collagens and ventricular distensibility at elevated pressures
by
Jugdutt, Bodh I
,
Uwiera, Richard R. E
,
Idikio, Halliday
in
ACE inhibitors
,
Animals
,
Beta-adrenergic blocker
2007
We investigated whether therapeutic drugs given during healing following acute myocardial infarction (AMI) modify infarct collagens and left ventricular (LV) distensibility. We treated dogs with drugs from major classes (i.e., indomethacin, ibuprofen, captopril, enalapril, verapamil, amlodipine, propranolol, isosorbide dinitrate [ISDN] and digoxin) between day 2 and 6 weeks and measured hemodynamics, LV remodeling and function during healing over 6 weeks after transmural anterior AMI, and regional collagens, LV distensibility under increasing pressure, rupture threshold (RT), and topography at 6 weeks. Relative to sham, AMI controls showed infarct zone (IZ) expansion and thinning, 9.3-fold increase in IZ collagen, LV dilation and dysfunction, and no change in distensibility and RT. Relative to controls, indomethacin as well as enalapril, captopril and amlodipine decreased IZ collagen. Infarct expansion was attenuated by ibuprofen, captopril, amlodipine and ISDN but augmented by indomethacin. Infarct thinning was prevented by captopril, amlodipine and ISDN but enhanced by indomethacin. Importantly, indomethacin and enalapril enhanced LV distensibility and lowered RT. Distensibility correlated positively with IZ type III collagen and negatively with type I/III collagen ratio and pyridinoline cross-links whereas RT correlated positively with IZ type I collagen. Systolic volume and ejection fraction deteriorated with indomethacin but were improved or preserved with other therapies. The results demonstrate that different therapeutic drugs may produce different effects on IZ collagens during healing post-AMI: drugs that attenuate or adversely alter IZ collagens also enhance LV distensibility, augment adverse remodeling and lower RT, suggesting that testing for these effects post-AMI is warranted.
Journal Article
Myocardial infarction augments sleep to limit cardiac inflammation and damage
2024
Sleep is integral to cardiovascular health
1
,
2
. Yet, the circuits that connect cardiovascular pathology and sleep are incompletely understood. It remains unclear whether cardiac injury influences sleep and whether sleep-mediated neural outputs contribute to heart healing and inflammation. Here we report that in humans and mice, monocytes are actively recruited to the brain after myocardial infarction (MI) to augment sleep, which suppresses sympathetic outflow to the heart, limiting inflammation and promoting healing. After MI, microglia rapidly recruit circulating monocytes to the brain’s thalamic lateral posterior nucleus (LPN) via the choroid plexus, where they are reprogrammed to generate tumour necrosis factor (TNF). In the thalamic LPN, monocytic TNF engages
Tnfrsf1a
-expressing glutamatergic neurons to increase slow wave sleep pressure and abundance. Disrupting sleep after MI worsens cardiac function, decreases heart rate variability and causes spontaneous ventricular tachycardia. After MI, disrupting or curtailing sleep by manipulating glutamatergic TNF signalling in the thalamic LPN increases cardiac sympathetic input which signals through the β2-adrenergic receptor of macrophages to promote a chemotactic signature that increases monocyte influx. Poor sleep in the weeks following acute coronary syndrome increases susceptibility to secondary cardiovascular events and reduces the heart’s functional recovery. In parallel, insufficient sleep in humans reprogrammes β2-adrenergic receptor-expressing monocytes towards a chemotactic phenotype, enhancing their migratory capacity. Collectively, our data uncover cardiogenic regulation of sleep after heart injury, which restricts cardiac sympathetic input, limiting inflammation and damage.
Studies in humans and mice show that myocardial infarction recruits monocytes to the brain’s thalamus, promoting sleep, which in turn restricts cardiac inflammation and sympathetic signalling and assists healing.
Journal Article
Pitx2 promotes heart repair by activating the antioxidant response after cardiac injury
The transcription factor Pitx2 is upregulated in injured neonatal and Hippo-deficient mouse hearts, where it interacts with the Hippo effector protein Yap to activate reactive oxygen species scavengers, thus preventing the heart from oxidative damage.
Pitx2
promotes heart regeneration
The mammalian heart has only a transient neonatal renewal capacity, so there is therapeutic potential in the possibility of reactivating this capacity in the mature heart. Here James Martin and colleagues identify a mechanism that promotes heart repair both in neonatal mice and in the Hippo-deficient heart regeneration mouse model through upregulation of the Pitx2 transcription factor. Pitx2 interacts with the Hippo pathway effector Yap to activate reactive oxygen species scavengers, thus preventing oxidative damage of the heart.
Myocardial infarction results in compromised myocardial function and heart failure owing to insufficient cardiomyocyte self-renewal
1
. Unlike many vertebrates, mammalian hearts have only a transient neonatal renewal capacity
2
. Reactivating primitive reparative ability in the mature mammalian heart requires knowledge of the mechanisms that promote early heart repair. By testing an established Hippo-deficient heart regeneration mouse model for factors that promote renewal, here we show that the expression of
Pitx2
is induced in injured, Hippo-deficient ventricles.
Pitx2
-deficient neonatal mouse hearts failed to repair after apex resection, whereas adult mouse cardiomyocytes with
Pitx2
gain-of-function efficiently regenerated after myocardial infarction. Genomic analyses indicated that Pitx2 activated genes encoding electron transport chain components and reactive oxygen species scavengers. A subset of Pitx2 target genes was cooperatively regulated with the Hippo pathway effector Yap. Furthermore, Nrf2, a regulator of the antioxidant response
3
, directly regulated the expression and subcellular localization of
Pitx2
.
Pitx2
mutant myocardium had increased levels of reactive oxygen species, while antioxidant supplementation suppressed the
Pitx2
loss-of-function phenotype. These findings reveal a genetic pathway activated by tissue damage that is essential for cardiac repair.
Journal Article
Single-cell multiomic analysis identifies macrophage subpopulations in promoting cardiac repair
by
Fu, Mingzhu
,
Xu, Longhui
,
Ai, Shanshan
in
Animals
,
Calgranulin B - genetics
,
Calgranulin B - metabolism
2024
Cardiac mononuclear phagocytic cells (Cardiac MPCs) participate in maintaining homeostasis and orchestrating cardiac responses upon injury. However, the function of specific MPC subtypes and the related cell fate commitment mechanisms remain elusive in regenerative and nonregenerative hearts due to their cellular heterogeneities. Using spatiotemporal single-cell epigenomic analysis of cardiac MPCs in regenerative (P1) and nonregenerative (P10) mouse hearts after injury, we found that P1 hearts accumulate reparative Arg1+ macrophages, while proinflammatory S100a9+Ly6c+ monocytes are uniquely abundant during nonregenerative remodeling. Moreover, blocking chemokine CXCR2 to inhibit the specification of the S100a9+Ly6c+-biased inflammatory fate in P10 hearts resulted in elevated wound repair responses and marked improvements in cardiac function after injury. Single-cell RNA-Seq further confirmed an increased Arg1+ macrophage subpopulation after CXCR2 blockade, which was accomplished by increased expression of wound repair-related genes and reduced expression of proinflammatory genes. Collectively, our findings provide instructive insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying the function and fate specification of heterogeneous MPCs during cardiac repair and identify potential therapeutic targets for myocardial infarction.
Journal Article
Inflammatory cells and their non-coding RNAs as targets for treating myocardial infarction
by
Dodsworth, Michael
,
Jung, Mira
,
Thum, Thomas
in
Adaptive immunity
,
Cancer
,
Cardiovascular diseases
2019
Myocardial infarction triggers infiltration of several types of immune cells that coordinate both innate and adaptive immune responses. These play a dual role in post-infarction cardiac remodeling by initiating and resolving inflammatory processes, which needs to occur in a timely and well-orchestrated way to ensure a reestablishment of normalized cardiac functions. Thus, therapeutic modulation of immune responses might have benefits for infarct patients. While such strategies have shown great potential in treating cancer, applications in the post-infarction context have been disappointing. One challenge has been the complexity and plasticity of immune cells and their functions in cardiac regulation and healing. The types appear in patterns that are temporally and spatially distinct, while influencing each other and the surrounding tissue. A comprehensive understanding of the immune cell repertoire and their regulatory functions following infarction is sorely needed. Processes of cardiac remodeling trigger additional genetic changes that may also play critical roles in the aftermath of cardiovascular disease. Some of these changes involve non-coding RNAs that play crucial roles in the regulation of immune cells and may, therefore, be of therapeutic interest. This review summarizes what is currently known about the functions of immune cells and non-coding RNAs during post-infarction wound healing. We address some of the challenges that remain and describe novel therapeutic approaches under development that are based on regulating immune responses through non-coding RNAs in the aftermath of the disease.
Journal Article
The cardiac lymphatic system stimulates resolution of inflammation following myocardial infarction
by
Gunadasa-Rohling, Mala
,
Barnette, Damien N.
,
Norman, Sophie
in
Animals
,
Antigens
,
Biomedical research
2018
Myocardial infarction (MI) arising from obstruction of the coronary circulation engenders massive cardiomyocyte loss and replacement by non-contractile scar tissue, leading to pathological remodeling, dysfunction, and ultimately heart failure. This is presently a global health problem for which there is no effective cure. Following MI, the innate immune system directs the phagocytosis of dead cell debris in an effort to stimulate cell repopulation and tissue renewal. In the mammalian adult heart, however, the persistent influx of immune cells, coupled with the lack of an inherent regenerative capacity, results in cardiac fibrosis. Here, we reveal that stimulation of cardiac lymphangiogenesis with VEGF-C improves clearance of the acute inflammatory response after MI by trafficking immune cells to draining mediastinal lymph nodes (MLNs) in a process dependent on lymphatic vessel endothelial hyaluronan receptor 1 (LYVE-1). Deletion of Lyve1 in mice, preventing docking and transit of leukocytes through the lymphatic endothelium, results in exacerbation of chronic inflammation and long-term deterioration of cardiac function. Our findings support targeting of the lymphatic/immune cell axis as a therapeutic paradigm to promote immune modulation and heart repair.
Journal Article