Smooth muscle cell FTO regulates contractile function.
Melissa A LuseNenja KrügerMiranda E GoodLauren A BiwerVlad SerbuleaAnita SalamonRebecca A DeatonNorbert LeitingerAxel GödeckeBrant E IsaksonPublished in: American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology (2022)
The fat mass and obesity gene (FTO) is a N 6 -methyladenosine RNA demethylase that was initially linked by Genome-wide association studies to increased rates of obesity. Subsequent studies have revealed multiple mass-independent effects of the gene, including cardiac myocyte contractility. We created a mouse with a conditional and inducible smooth muscle cell deletion of Fto (Myh11 Cre + Fto fl/fl ) and did not observe any changes in mouse body mass or mitochondrial metabolism. However, the mice had significantly decreased blood pressure (hypotensive), despite increased heart rate and sodium, and significantly increased plasma renin. Remarkably, the third-order mesenteric arteries from these mice had almost no myogenic tone or capacity to constrict to smooth muscle depolarization or phenylephrine. Microarray analysis from Fto -/- -isolated smooth muscle cells demonstrated a significant decrease in serum response factor ( Srf ) and the downstream effectors Acta2 , Myocd , and Tagln ; this was confirmed in cultured human coronary arteries with FTO siRNA. We conclude Fto is an important component to the contractility of smooth muscle cells. NEW & NOTEWORTHY We show a key role for the fat mass obesity (FTO) gene in regulating smooth muscle contractility, possibly by methylation of serum response factor (Srf).
Keyphrases
- smooth muscle
- high fat diet induced
- heart rate
- blood pressure
- insulin resistance
- metabolic syndrome
- weight loss
- genome wide
- type diabetes
- endothelial cells
- single cell
- copy number
- adipose tissue
- cell therapy
- weight gain
- genome wide association
- skeletal muscle
- dna methylation
- coronary artery
- gene expression
- left ventricular
- blood glucose
- physical activity
- mesenchymal stem cells
- aortic valve
- atrial fibrillation
- bone marrow
- angiotensin ii
- angiotensin converting enzyme