The chromatin-binding protein Smyd1 restricts adult mammalian heart growth

Author:

Franklin Sarah1,Kimball Todd2,Rasmussen Tara L.3,Rosa-Garrido Manuel2,Chen Haodong2,Tran Tam2,Miller Mickey R.1,Gray Ricardo2,Jiang Shanxi2,Ren Shuxun2,Wang Yibin2,Tucker Haley O.3,Vondriska Thomas M.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, Nora Eccles Harrison Cardiovascular Research and Training Institute, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah; and

2. Departments of Anesthesiology & Perioperative Medicine, Medicine (Cardiology) and Physiology, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, California;

3. Department of Molecular Genetics and the Institute for Cellular and Molecular Biology, University of Texas at Austin, Texas

Abstract

All terminally differentiated organs face two challenges, maintaining their cellular identity and restricting organ size. The molecular mechanisms responsible for these decisions are of critical importance to organismal development, and perturbations in their normal balance can lead to disease. A hallmark of heart failure, a condition affecting millions of people worldwide, is hypertrophic growth of cardiomyocytes. The various forms of heart failure in human and animal models share conserved transcriptome remodeling events that lead to expression of genes normally silenced in the healthy adult heart. However, the chromatin remodeling events that maintain cell and organ size are incompletely understood; insights into these mechanisms could provide new targets for heart failure therapy. Using a quantitative proteomics approach to identify muscle-specific chromatin regulators in a mouse model of hypertrophy and heart failure, we identified upregulation of the histone methyltransferase Smyd1 during disease. Inducible loss-of-function studies in vivo demonstrate that Smyd1 is responsible for restricting growth in the adult heart, with its absence leading to cellular hypertrophy, organ remodeling, and fulminate heart failure. Molecular studies reveal Smyd1 to be a muscle-specific regulator of gene expression and indicate that Smyd1 modulates expression of gene isoforms whose expression is associated with cardiac pathology. Importantly, activation of Smyd1 can prevent pathological cell growth. These findings have basic implications for our understanding of cardiac pathologies and open new avenues to the treatment of cardiac hypertrophy and failure by modulating Smyd1.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHBLI)

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology

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