A Conserved Mechanism of Cardiac Hypertrophy Regression through FoxO1

Author:

Martin Thomas G.,Hunt Dakota R.,Langer Stephen J.,Tan Yuxiao,Ebmeier Christopher C.,Crocini Claudia,Chung Eunhee,Leinwand Leslie A.ORCID

Abstract

SUMMARYThe heart is a highly plastic organ that responds to diverse stimuli to modify form and function. The molecular mechanisms of adaptive physiological cardiac hypertrophy are well-established; however, the regulation of hypertrophy regression is poorly understood. To identify molecular features of regression, we studied Burmese pythons which experience reversible cardiac hypertrophy following large, infrequent meals. Using multi-omics screens followed by targeted analyses, we found forkhead box protein O1 (FoxO1) transcription factor signaling, and downstream autophagy activity, were downregulated during hypertrophy, but re-activated with regression. To determine whether these events were mechanistically related to regression, we established anin vitroplatform of cardiomyocyte hypertrophy and regression from treatment with fed python plasma. FoxO1 inhibition prevented regression in this system, while FoxO1 activation reversed fed python plasma-induced hypertrophy in an autophagy-dependent manner. We next examined whether FoxO1 was implicated in mammalian models of reversible hypertrophy from exercise and pregnancy and found that in both cases FoxO1 was activated during regression. In these models, as in pythons, activation of FoxO1 was associated with increased expression FoxO1 target genes involved in autophagy. Taken together, our findings suggest FoxO1-dependent autophagy is a conserved mechanism for regression of physiological cardiac hypertrophy across species.HIGHLIGHTSPost-prandial cardiac remodeling in Burmese pythons is associated with dynamic regulation of FoxO1 and autophagy.Regression of fed python plasma-induced hypertrophy in mammalian cardiomyocytes is FoxO1-dependent.Activation of FoxO1-dependent autophagy is a conserved feature of physiological hypertrophy regression in mammalian models.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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