Prolonged tamoxifen-enriched diet is associated with cardiomyopathy and nutritional frailty in mice.
Janith HalpagePatricia DaSilva PantojaSalvatore MancarellaPublished in: Experimental physiology (2024)
Tamoxifen (TAM) is required for gene recombination in the inducible Cre/lox system. The TAM-enriched diet is considered safe, with negligible impact on animal wellbeing. However, studies reporting the long-term effects of the TAM diet and its potential impact on experimental outcomes are scarce. We conducted a longitudinal study on mice exposed to a 4-week dietary TAM citrate supplementation. Several parameters were recorded, such as body weight, body composition, mortality, and cardiac function. The collagen1a2 (Col1a2) transgenic mouse was used to assess TAM-induced recombination in vivo in cardiac fibroblasts followed by myocardial infarction (MI). The impact of TAM on the MI outcome was also evaluated. The recombination efficiency and cytotoxic effect of the TAM active metabolite, 4-hydroxy-tamoxifen (4-OHT), were assessed in vitro. Mice exposed to a TAM diet showed body weight loss and a 10% increase in mortality (P = 0.045). The TAM diet decreased cardiac function and induced cardiac remodeling, indicated by decreased fractional shortening from 32.23% to 19.23% (P = 0.001) and left ventricular (LV) wall thinning. All measured parameters were reversed to normal when mice were returned to a normal diet. Infarcted Col1a2-CreER mice on the TAM regimen showed gene recombination in fibroblasts, but it was associated with a substantial increase in mortality post-surgery (2.5-fold) compared to the controls. In vitro, 4-OHT induced gene editing in fibroblasts; however, cell growth arrest and cytotoxicity were observed at high concentrations. In conclusion, prolonged exposure to the TAM diet can be detrimental and necessitates careful model selection and interpretation of the results.
Keyphrases
- weight loss
- physical activity
- left ventricular
- body composition
- high fat diet induced
- bariatric surgery
- dna damage
- body weight
- roux en y gastric bypass
- high glucose
- dna repair
- cardiovascular events
- diabetic rats
- extracellular matrix
- breast cancer cells
- copy number
- risk factors
- acute myocardial infarction
- oxidative stress
- emergency department
- clinical trial
- body mass index
- mitral valve
- positive breast cancer
- wild type
- gene expression
- aortic stenosis
- electronic health record
- cell cycle
- endothelial cells
- study protocol
- cardiac resynchronization therapy