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Lionheart LincRNA alleviates cardiac systolic dysfunction under pressure overload.

Yasuhide KuwabaraShuhei TsujiMasataka NishigaMasayasu IzuharaShinji ItoKazuya NagaoTakahiro HorieShin WatanabeSatoshi KoyamaHisanori KiryuYasuhiro NakashimaOsamu BabaTetsushi NakaoTomohiro NishinoNaoya SowaYui MiyasakaTakeshi HataniYuya IdeFumiko NakazekiMasahiro KimuraYoshinori YoshidaTsukasa InadaTakeshi KimuraKoh Ono
Published in: Communications biology (2020)
Recent high-throughput approaches have revealed a vast number of transcripts with unknown functions. Many of these transcripts are long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs), and intergenic region-derived lncRNAs are classified as long intergenic noncoding RNAs (lincRNAs). Although Myosin heavy chain 6 (Myh6) encoding primary contractile protein is down-regulated in stressed hearts, the underlying mechanisms are not fully clarified especially in terms of lincRNAs. Here, we screen upregulated lincRNAs in pressure overloaded hearts and identify a muscle-abundant lincRNA termed Lionheart. Compared with controls, deletion of the Lionheart in mice leads to decreased systolic function and a reduction in MYH6 protein levels following pressure overload. We reveal decreased MYH6 results from an interaction between Lionheart and Purine-rich element-binding protein A after pressure overload. Furthermore, human LIONHEART levels in left ventricular biopsy specimens positively correlate with cardiac systolic function. Our results demonstrate Lionheart plays a pivotal role in cardiac remodeling via regulation of MYH6.
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