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Myosins and MyomiR Network in Patients with Obstructive Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy.

Chiara FoglieniMaria LombardiDavide LazzeroniRiccardo ZerboniEdoardo LazzariniGloria BertoliAnnalinda PisanoFrancesca GirolamiAnnapaola AndolfoCinzia MagagnottiGiovanni PerettoCarmem L SartorioIacopo OlivottoGiovanni La CannaOttavio AlfieriOrnella E RimoldiLucio BarileGiulia d'AmatiPaolo G Camici
Published in: Biomedicines (2022)
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most common genetic cardiomyopathy. The molecular mechanisms determining HCM phenotypes are incompletely understood. Myocardial biopsies were obtained from a group of patients with obstructive HCM (n = 23) selected for surgical myectomy and from 9 unused donor hearts (controls). A subset of tissue-abundant myectomy samples from HCM (n = 10) and controls (n = 6) was submitted to laser-capture microdissection to isolate cardiomyocytes. We investigated the relationship among clinical phenotype, cardiac myosin proteins (MyHC6, MyHC7, and MyHC7b) measured by optimized label-free mass spectrometry, the relative genes ( MYH7 , MYH7B and MYLC2 ), and the MyomiR network (myosin-encoded microRNA ( miRs ) and long-noncoding RNAs ( Mhrt )) measured using RNA sequencing and RT-qPCR. MyHC6 was lower in HCM vs. controls, whilst MyHC7, MyHC7b, and MyLC2 were comparable. MYH7, MYH7B , and MYLC2 were higher in HCM whilst MYH6 , miR-208a, miR-208b, miR-499 were comparable in HCM and controls. These results are compatible with defective transcription by active genes in HCM. Mhrt and two miR-499 -target genes, SOX6 and PTBP3 , were upregulated in HCM. The presence of HCM-associated mutations correlated with PTBP3 in myectomies and with SOX6 in cardiomyocytes. Additionally, iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes, transiently transfected with either miR-208a or miR-499 , demonstrated a time-dependent relationship between MyomiRs and myosin genes. The transfection end-stage pattern was at least in part similar to findings in HCM myectomies. These data support uncoupling between myosin protein/genes and a modulatory role for the myosin/MyomiR network in the HCM myocardium, possibly contributing to phenotypic diversity and providing putative therapeutic targets.
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