Login / Signup

Estrogen receptor alpha deficiency in cardiomyocytes reprograms the heart-derived extracellular vesicle proteome and induces obesity in female mice.

Yow Keat ThamBianca C BernardoBethany ClaridgeGunes S YildizLiesel Min-Linn WoonSimon BondHaoyun FangJenny Y Y OoiAya MatsumotoJieting LuoCeleste Ming-Kay TaiClaudia A HarmawanHelen KiriazisDaniel G DonnerNatalie A MellettE Dale AbelSohaib A KhanDavid P De SouzaSheik Nadeem Elahee DoomunKevin LiuRuidong XiangManika SinghMichael InouyePeter J MeikleKate L WeeksBrian G DrewDavid W GreeningJulie R McMullen
Published in: Nature cardiovascular research (2023)
Dysregulation of estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) has been linked with increased metabolic and cardiovascular disease risk. Here, we generate and characterize cardiomyocyte-specific ERα knockout (ERαHKO) mice to assess the role of ERα in the heart. The most striking phenotype was obesity in female ERαHKO but not male ERαHKO mice. Female ERαHKO mice showed cardiac dysfunction, mild glucose and insulin intolerance and reduced ERα gene expression in skeletal muscle and white adipose tissue. Transcriptomic, proteomic, lipidomic and metabolomic analyses revealed evidence of contractile and/or metabolic dysregulation in heart, skeletal muscle and white adipose tissue. We show that heart-derived extracellular vesicles from female ERαHKO mice contain a distinct proteome associated with lipid and metabolic regulation, and have the capacity to metabolically reprogram the target skeletal myocyte proteome with functional impacts on glycolytic capacity and reserve. This multi-omics study uncovers a cardiac-initiated and sex-specific cardiometabolic phenotype regulated by ERα and provides insights into extracellular vesicle-mediated interorgan communication.
Keyphrases