FTO-Dependent N 6 -Methyladenosine Regulates Cardiac Function During Remodeling and Repair

Author:

Mathiyalagan Prabhu1,Adamiak Marta1,Mayourian Joshua1,Sassi Yassine1,Liang Yaxuan1,Agarwal Neha1,Jha Divya1,Zhang Shihong1,Kohlbrenner Erik1,Chepurko Elena1,Chen Jiqiu1,Trivieri Maria G.1,Singh Rajvir1,Bouchareb Rihab1,Fish Kenneth1,Ishikawa Kiyotake1,Lebeche Djamel1,Hajjar Roger J.1,Sahoo Susmita1

Affiliation:

1. Cardiovascular Research Center, Icahn School of Medicine, Mount Sinai, NY

Abstract

Background: Despite its functional importance in various fundamental bioprocesses, studies of N 6 -methyladenosine (m6A) in the heart are lacking. Here, we show that the FTO (fat mass and obesity-associated protein), an m6A demethylase, plays a critical role in cardiac contractile function during homeostasis, remodeling, and regeneration. Methods: We used clinical human samples, preclinical pig and mouse models, and primary cardiomyocyte cell cultures to study the functional role of m6A and FTO in the heart and in cardiomyocytes. We modulated expression of FTO by using adeno-associated virus serotype 9 (in vivo), adenovirus (both in vivo and in vitro), and small interfering RNAs (in vitro) to study its function in regulating cardiomyocyte m6A, calcium dynamics and contractility, and cardiac function postischemia. We performed methylated (m6A) RNA immunoprecipitation sequencing to map transcriptome-wide m6A, and methylated (m6A) RNA immunoprecipitation quantitative polymerase chain reaction assays to map and validate m6A in individual transcripts, in healthy and failing hearts, and in myocytes. Results: We discovered that FTO has decreased expression in failing mammalian hearts and hypoxic cardiomyocytes, thereby increasing m6A in RNA and decreasing cardiomyocyte contractile function. Improving expression of FTO in failing mouse hearts attenuated the ischemia-induced increase in m6A and decrease in cardiac contractile function. This is performed by the demethylation activity of FTO, which selectively demethylates cardiac contractile transcripts, thus preventing their degradation and improving their protein expression under ischemia. In addition, we demonstrate that FTO overexpression in mouse models of myocardial infarction decreased fibrosis and enhanced angiogenesis. Conclusions: Collectively, our study demonstrates the functional importance of the FTO-dependent cardiac m6A methylome in cardiac contraction during heart failure and provides a novel mechanistic insight into the therapeutic mechanisms of FTO.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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