A RGS7-CaMKII complex drives myocyte-intrinsic and myocyte-extrinsic mechanisms of chemotherapy-induced cardiotoxicity.
Madhuri BasakAbhishek Singh SengarKiran DasTarun MahataManish KumarDinesh KumarSayan BiswasSubhasish SarkarPranesh KumarPriyadip DasAdele StewartBiswanath MaityPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
Dose-limiting cardiotoxicity remains a major limitation in the clinical use of cancer chemotherapeutics. Here, we describe a role for Regulator of G protein Signaling 7 (RGS7) in chemotherapy-dependent heart damage, the demonstration for a functional role of RGS7 outside of the nervous system and retina. Though expressed at low levels basally, we observed robust up-regulation of RGS7 in the human and murine myocardium following chemotherapy exposure. In ventricular cardiomyocytes (VCM), RGS7 forms a complex with Ca 2+ /calmodulin-dependent protein kinase (CaMKII) supported by key residues (K412 and P391) in the RGS domain of RGS7. In VCM treated with chemotherapeutic drugs, RGS7 facilitates CaMKII oxidation and phosphorylation and CaMKII-dependent oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, and apoptosis. Cardiac-specific RGS7 knockdown protected the heart against chemotherapy-dependent oxidative stress, fibrosis, and myocyte loss and improved left ventricular function in mice treated with doxorubicin. Conversely, RGS7 overexpression induced fibrosis, reactive oxygen species generation, and cell death in the murine myocardium that were mitigated following CaMKII inhibition. RGS7 also drives production and release of the cardiokine neuregulin-1, which facilitates paracrine communication between VCM and neighboring vascular endothelial cells (EC), a maladaptive mechanism contributing to VCM dysfunction in the failing heart. Importantly, while RGS7 was both necessary and sufficient to facilitate chemotherapy-dependent cytotoxicity in VCM, RGS7 is dispensable for the cancer-killing actions of these same drugs. These selective myocyte-intrinsic and myocyte-extrinsic actions of RGS7 in heart identify RGS7 as an attractive therapeutic target in the mitigation of chemotherapy-driven cardiotoxicity.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- endothelial cells
- left ventricular
- heart failure
- cell death
- protein kinase
- high glucose
- reactive oxygen species
- atrial fibrillation
- dna damage
- diabetic rats
- squamous cell carcinoma
- young adults
- type diabetes
- papillary thyroid
- climate change
- nitric oxide
- adipose tissue
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- metabolic syndrome
- insulin resistance
- skeletal muscle
- hydrogen peroxide
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction