Smooth Muscle Specific Ablation of CXCL12 in Mice Downregulates CXCR7 Associated with Defective Coronary Arteries and Cardiac Hypertrophy.
Santhosh Kumar GhadgeMoritz MessnerHerbert SeiringerThomas MaurerSimon StagglTanja ZellerChristian MüllerDaniela BörnigenWolfgang J WeningerStefan H GeyerSieghart SopperAnne KrogsdamGerhard PölzlAxel BauerMarc-Michael ZarubaPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2021)
The chemokine CXCL12 plays a fundamental role in cardiovascular development, cell trafficking, and myocardial repair. Human genome-wide association studies even have identified novel loci downstream of the CXCL12 gene locus associated with coronary artery disease and myocardial infarction. Nevertheless, cell and tissue specific effects of CXCL12 are barely understood. Since we detected high expression of CXCL12 in smooth muscle (SM) cells, we generated a SM22-alpha-Cre driven mouse model to ablate CXCL12 (SM-CXCL12-/-). SM-CXCL12-/- mice revealed high embryonic lethality (50%) with developmental defects, including aberrant topology of coronary arteries. Postnatally, SM-CXCL12-/- mice developed severe cardiac hypertrophy associated with fibrosis, apoptotic cell death, impaired heart function, and severe coronary vascular defects characterized by thinned and dilated arteries. Transcriptome analyses showed specific upregulation of pathways associated with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, collagen protein network, heart-related proteoglycans, and downregulation of the M2 macrophage modulators. CXCL12 mutants showed endothelial downregulation of the CXCL12 co-receptor CXCR7. Treatment of SM-CXCL12-/- mice with the CXCR7 agonist TC14012 attenuated cardiac hypertrophy associated with increased pERK signaling. Our data suggest a critical role of smooth muscle-specific CXCL12 in arterial development, vessel maturation, and cardiac hypertrophy. Pharmacological stimulation of CXCR7 might be a promising target to attenuate adverse hypertrophic remodeling.
Keyphrases
- smooth muscle
- coronary artery disease
- cell death
- mouse model
- coronary artery
- hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- single cell
- poor prognosis
- left ventricular
- cell proliferation
- endothelial cells
- gene expression
- adipose tissue
- genome wide
- type diabetes
- cardiovascular disease
- genome wide association
- rna seq
- mesenchymal stem cells
- high fat diet induced
- stem cells
- signaling pathway
- metabolic syndrome
- atrial fibrillation
- long non coding rna
- skeletal muscle
- bone marrow
- drug induced
- genome wide association study
- anti inflammatory
- transcatheter aortic valve replacement
- combination therapy
- liver fibrosis
- network analysis