Login / Signup

A novel micropeptide, Slitharin, exerts cardioprotective effects in myocardial infarction.

Ahmed Gamal-Eldin IbrahimAlessandra CiulloShukuro YamaguchiChang LiTravis AntesXaviar JonesLiang LiRamachandran MuraliInnokentiy MaslennikovNiveda SundararamanDaniel SoetkampEugenio CingolaniJennifer Van EykEduardo Marbán
Published in: Proteomics. Clinical applications (2024)
We identified a novel 24-amino acid micropeptide (dubbed Slitharin [Slt]) with a non-canonical leucine start codon, arising from long intergenic non-coding (LINC) RNA 2099. Neonatal rat ventricular myocytes (NRVMs) exposed to Slt were protected from hypoxic injury in vitro compared to a vehicle or scrambled control. Transcriptomic analysis of cardiomyocytes exposed to Slt reveals cytoprotective capacity, putatively through regulation of stress-induced MAPK-ERK. Slt also exerted cardioprotective effects in rats with myocardial infarction as shown by reduced infarct size 48 h post-injury. Conclusions and clinical relavance: Thus, Slt is a non-coding RNA-derived micropeptide, identified in the extracellular space, with a potential cardioprotective function.
Keyphrases
  • stress induced
  • heart failure
  • left ventricular
  • signaling pathway
  • amino acid
  • cell proliferation
  • oxidative stress
  • coronary artery disease
  • climate change