Heart failure promotes multimorbidity through innate immune memory.
Yukiteru NakayamaKatsuhito FujiuTsukasa OshimaJun MatsudaJunichi SugitaTakumi James MatsubaraYuxiang LiuKohsaku GotoKunihiro KaniRyoko UchidaNorifumi TakedaHiroyuki MoritaYingda XiaoMichiko HayashiYujin MaruEriko HasumiToshiya KojimaSoh IshiguroYusuke KijimaNozomu YachieHans Jiro BeckerRyo YamamotoFujimi KudoMio NakanishiAtsushi IwamaRyoji FujikiAtsushi KanedaOsamu OharaRyozo NagaiIchiro ManabeIssei KomuroPublished in: Science immunology (2024)
Patients with heart failure (HF) often experience repeated acute decompensation and develop comorbidities such as chronic kidney disease and frailty syndrome. Although this suggests pathological interaction among comorbidities, the mechanisms linking them are poorly understood. Here, we identified alterations in hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) as a critical driver of recurrent HF and associated comorbidities. Bone marrow transplantation from HF-experienced mice resulted in spontaneous cardiac dysfunction and fibrosis in recipient mice, as well as increased vulnerability to kidney and skeletal muscle insults. HF enhanced the capacity of HSCs to generate proinflammatory macrophages. In HF mice, global chromatin accessibility analysis and single-cell RNA-seq showed that transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) signaling was suppressed in HSCs, which corresponded with repressed sympathetic nervous activity in bone marrow. Transplantation of bone marrow from mice in which TGF-β signaling was inhibited similarly exacerbated cardiac dysfunction. Collectively, these results suggest that cardiac stress modulates the epigenome of HSCs, which in turn alters their capacity to generate cardiac macrophage subpopulations. This change in HSCs may be a common driver of repeated HF events and comorbidity by serving as a key carrier of "stress memory."
Keyphrases
- bone marrow
- transforming growth factor
- rna seq
- single cell
- acute heart failure
- heart failure
- left ventricular
- high fat diet induced
- stem cells
- chronic kidney disease
- skeletal muscle
- mesenchymal stem cells
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- oxidative stress
- working memory
- cell therapy
- insulin resistance
- transcription factor
- innate immune
- climate change
- high throughput
- adipose tissue
- liver failure
- dna methylation
- type diabetes
- genome wide
- end stage renal disease
- intensive care unit
- sensitive detection
- drug induced
- hepatitis b virus
- heat stress
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- living cells
- aortic dissection