Fibulin7 Mediated Pathological Cardiac Remodeling through EGFR Binding and EGFR-Dependent FAK/AKT Signaling Activation.
Xuehui ZhengLingxin LiuJing LiuChen ZhangJie ZhangYan QiLin XieChunmei ZhangGuoqing YaoPei-Li BuPublished in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2023)
Adverse remodeling after myocardial infarction (MI) result in heart failure and sudden cardiac death. Fibulin7 (FBLN7) is an adhesion protein excreted into the extracellular matrix that functions in multiple biological processes. However, whether and how FBLN7 affects post-MI cardiac remodeling remains unclear. Here, the authors identify FBLN7 as a critical profibrotic regulator of adverse cardiac remodeling. They observe significantly upregulated serum FBLN7 levels in MI patients with left ventricular remodeling compared to those without MI. Microarray dataset analysis reveal FBLN7 is upregulated in human heart samples from patients with dilated and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy compared with non-failing hearts. The authors demonstrate that FBLN7 deletion attenuated post-MI cardiac remodeling, leading to better cardiac function and reduced myocardial fibrosis, whereas overexpression of FBLN7 results in the opposite effects. Mechanistically, FBLN7 binds to the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) through its EGF-like domain, together with the EGF-like calcium-binding domain, and induces EGFR autophosphorylation at tyrosine (Y) 1068 and Y1173, which activates downstream focal adhesion kinase/AKT signaling, thereby leading to fibroblast-to-myofibroblast transdifferentiation. In addition, FBLN7-EGFR mediates this signal transduction, and the fibrotic response is effectively suppressed by the inhibition of EGFR activity. Taken together, FBLN7 plays an important role in cardiac remodeling and fibrosis after MI.
Keyphrases
- epidermal growth factor receptor
- left ventricular
- tyrosine kinase
- hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- small cell lung cancer
- heart failure
- advanced non small cell lung cancer
- extracellular matrix
- acute myocardial infarction
- left atrial
- growth factor
- cell proliferation
- mitral valve
- aortic stenosis
- transcription factor
- signaling pathway
- endothelial cells
- escherichia coli
- gene expression
- genome wide
- idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
- atrial fibrillation
- dna binding
- acute heart failure
- electronic health record
- candida albicans
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- biofilm formation
- emergency department
- aortic valve
- ejection fraction
- acute coronary syndrome
- single cell