Ablation of Vitamin D Signaling in Cardiomyocytes Leads to Functional Impairment and Stimulation of Pro-Inflammatory and Pro-Fibrotic Gene Regulatory Networks in a Left Ventricular Hypertrophy Model in Mice

Author:

Zupcic Ana1,Latic Nejla1ORCID,Oubounyt Mhaned2,Ramesova Alice1ORCID,Carmeliet Geert3,Baumbach Jan2,Elkjaer Maria L.2ORCID,Erben Reinhold G.14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Veterinary Medicine, 1210 Vienna, Austria

2. Institute for Computational Systems Biology, University of Hamburg, Albert-Einstein-Ring 8-10, 22761 Hamburg, Germany

3. Department of Chronic Diseases, Metabolism and Ageing, 3000 Leuven, Belgium

4. Ludwig Boltzmann Institute of Osteology, Heinrich-Collin-Strasse 30, 1140 Vienna, Austria

Abstract

The association between vitamin D deficiency and cardiovascular disease remains a controversial issue. This study aimed to further elucidate the role of vitamin D signaling in the development of left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy and dysfunction. To ablate the vitamin D receptor (VDR) specifically in cardiomyocytes, VDRfl/fl mice were crossed with Mlcv2-Cre mice. To induce LV hypertrophy experimentally by increasing cardiac afterload, transverse aortic constriction (TAC) was employed. Sham or TAC surgery was performed in 4-month-old, male, wild-type, VDRfl/fl, Mlcv2-Cre, and cardiomyocyte-specific VDR knockout (VDRCM-KO) mice. As expected, TAC induced profound LV hypertrophy and dysfunction, evidenced by echocardiography, aortic and cardiac catheterization, cardiac histology, and LV expression profiling 4 weeks post-surgery. Sham-operated mice showed no differences between genotypes. However, TAC VDRCM-KO mice, while having comparable cardiomyocyte size and LV fibrosis to TAC VDRfl/fl controls, exhibited reduced fractional shortening and ejection fraction as measured by echocardiography. Spatial transcriptomics of heart cryosections revealed more pronounced pro-inflammatory and pro-fibrotic gene regulatory networks in the stressed cardiac tissue niches of TAC VDRCM-KO compared to VDRfl/fl mice. Hence, our study supports the notion that vitamin D signaling in cardiomyocytes plays a protective role in the stressed heart.

Funder

Austrian Science Fund

German Federal Ministry of Education and Research

Lundbeckfonden

Publisher

MDPI AG

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