Content area
Gain-of-function mutations of Notch2 cause the rare autosomal dominant disorder known as Hajdu–Cheney syndrome (HCS). Most patients with HCS develop congenital heart disease; however, the precise mechanisms remain elusive. Here, a murine model expressing the human Notch2 intracellular domain (hN2ICD) in cardiomyocytes (hN2ICD-Tg CM ) was generated and the mice spontaneously developed ventricular diastolic dysfunction with preserved ejection fraction and cardiac hypertrophy. Ectopic hN2ICD expression promoted cardiomyocyte hypertrophy by suppressing adenylosuccinate lyase (ADSL)-mediated adenosine 5′-monophosphate (AMP) generation, which further enhanced the activation of the mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 pathway by reducing AMP-activated kinase activity. Hairy and enhancer of split 1 silencing abrogated hN2ICD-induced cardiomyocyte hypertrophy by increasing Adsl transcription. Importantly, pharmacological activation of AMP-activated kinase ameliorated cardiac hypertrophy and dysfunction in hN2ICD-Tg CM mice. The frameshift mutation in Notch2 exon 34 (c.6426dupT), which causes early-onset HCS, induces AC16 human cardiomyocyte hypertrophy through suppressing ADSL-mediated AMP generation. Thus, targeting Notch2-mediated purine nucleotide metabolism may be an attractive therapeutic approach to heart failure treatment.
Details
Hypertrophy;
Adenylosuccinate lyase;
Nucleotides;
Kinases;
Cardiomyocytes;
TOR protein;
Transcription activation;
Heart diseases;
Frameshift mutation;
Congestive heart failure;
AMP;
Hereditary diseases;
Age;
Notch protein;
Metabolism;
Rapamycin;
Animal models;
Mutation;
Adenosine monophosphate
; Li, Yizhe
; Chen, Shihong
; Yu, Tingting
; Sun, Weiyan
; Liu, Jiao
; Ren, Huiwen
; Zhou, Yao
; Wang, Lu
; Tao, Xixi
; Du, Ronglu
; Shang, Wenlong
; Li, Yinxiu; Tian, Danyang
; Wang, Bei
; Shen, Yujun
; Liu, Qian
; Yu, Ying