Abstract
AbstractHeart failure is the common final pathway of a range of conditions resulting in myocardial damage and a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Strategies to improve tissue repair and prevent heart failure thus remain an urgent clinical need. Recent studies have documented activation of the adaptive immune system in response to myocardial damage and have implicated anti-heart autoimmunity in the development of heart failure. In an attempt to target anti-heart autoimmune responses as new therapeutic avenue, the number of experimental studies using in vivo models of myocardial damage to study the ensuing immune response has surged.The beta-adrenergic agonist isoproterenol-hydrochloride has been used for its cardiac effects in a variety of different dosing and administration regimes. Most prominently, low doses (<10mg/kg sc) over an extended time period induce cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis. In addition, single injections of high doses (>100mg/kg) induce cardiomyocyte necrosis and have been used to mimic acute myocardial necrotic lesions as seen in myocardial infarction (MI). However, despite significant resource and animal welfare advantages, concerns about off-target effects and clinical relevance have so far limited uptake in the cardiovascular research community.To assess suitability of the isoproterenol model for the analysis of chronic post-MI immunological readouts, we treated C57BL/6J mice with a single intra-peritoneal bolus injection of 160mg/kg isoproterenol. Our results confirm the presence of necrotic lesions in the myocardium with significant resemblance of the histopathology of Type 2 MI. Kidneys develop mild fibrosis secondary to early cardiac damage, while other organs remain unaffected. Most importantly, we showed that isoproterenol treatment causes myocardial inflammation and fibrosis, activation of T cells in the heart-draining mediastinal lymph nodes, deposition of mature antibodies in the myocardium and the presence of auto-antibodies against the heart in the serum 12 weeks after the initial injury.In summary, this simple and cost-effective experimental model with significant animal welfare benefits induces myocardial damage reminiscent of human Type 2 MI, which is followed by a persistent adaptive immune response against the heart. This makes it a suitable and high-throughput model to study pathological mechanisms of anti-heart autoimmunity as well as to test potential immunomodulatory therapeutic approaches.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory