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Atypical ALPK2 kinase is not essential for cardiac development and function.

Julijus BogomolovasWei FengMatthew Daniel YuSerena HuangLunfeng ZhangChrista TrexlerYusu GuSimone SpinozziJu Chen
Published in: American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology (2020)
Protein kinases play an integral role in cardiac development, function, and disease. Recent experimental and clinical data have implied that protein kinases belonging to a family of atypical α-protein kinases, including α-protein kinase 2 (ALPK2), are important for regulating cardiac development and maintaining function via regulation of WNT signaling. A recent study in zebrafish reported that loss of ALPK2 leads to severe cardiac defects; however, the relevance of ALPK2 has not been studied in a mammalian animal model. To assess the role of ALPK2 in the mammalian heart, we generated two independent global Alpk2-knockout (Alpk2-gKO) mouse lines, using CRISPR/Cas9 technology. We performed physiological and biochemical analyses of Alpk2-gKO mice to determine the functional, morphological, and molecular consequences of Alpk2 deletion at the organismal level. We found that Alpk2-gKO mice exhibited normal cardiac function and morphology up to one year of age. Moreover, we did not observe altered WNT signaling in neonatal Alpk2-gKO mouse hearts. In conclusion, Alpk2 is dispensable for cardiac development and function in the murine model. Our results suggest that Alpk2 is a rapidly evolving gene that lost its essential cardiac functions in mammals.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Several studies indicated the importance of ALPK2 for cardiac function and development. A recent study in zebrafish report that loss of ALPK2 leads to severe cardiac defects. In contrast, murine Alpk2-gKO models developed in this work display no overt cardiac phenotype. Our results suggest ALPK2, as a rapidly evolving gene, lost its essential cardiac functions in mammals.
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