Publication | Open Access
Transverse aortic constriction leads to accelerated heart failure in mice lacking PPAR-γ coactivator 1α
370
Citations
31
References
2006
Year
Heart FailureMetabolic RemodelingCardiovascular FunctionTranscriptional RegulationMitochondrial BiogenesisMetabolic SignalingCell SignalingCardiologyTransverse Aortic ConstrictionPgc-1alpha RepressionMolecular PhysiologyVascular BiologyGene ExpressionCardiac ReprogrammingCell BiologyCardiac PathologyDevelopmental BiologyCardiovascular DiseaseMitochondrial FunctionPhysiologyMetabolic RegulationCardiovascular PhysiologyPpar-γ Coactivator 1αCardiac StressMedicine
Heart failure is accompanied by important defects in metabolism. The transcriptional coactivator peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator 1alpha (PGC-1alpha) is a powerful regulator of mitochondrial biology and metabolism. PGC-1alpha and numerous genes regulated by PGC-1alpha are repressed in models of cardiac stress, such as that generated by transverse aortic constriction (TAC). This finding has suggested that PGC-1alpha repression may contribute to the maladaptive response of the heart to chronic hemodynamic loads. We show here that TAC in mice genetically engineered to lack PGC-1alpha leads to accelerated cardiac dysfunction, which is accompanied by signs of significant clinical heart failure. Treating cardiac cells in tissue culture with the catecholamine epinephrine leads to repression of PGC-1alpha and many of its target genes, recapitulating the findings in vivo in response to TAC. Importantly, introduction of ectopic PGC-1alpha can reverse the repression of most of these genes by epinephrine. Together, these data indicate that endogenous PGC-1alpha serves a cardioprotective function and suggest that repression of PGC-1alpha significantly contributes to the development of heart failure. Moreover, the data suggest that elevating PGC-1alpha activity may have therapeutic potential in the treatment of heart failure.
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