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Capacity for resolution of Ras-MAPK-initiated early pathogenic myocardial hypertrophy modeled in mice
Authors:Wei Bih-Rong  Martin Philip L  Hoover Shelley B  Spehalski Elizabeth  Kumar Mia  Hoenerhoff Mark J  Rozenberg Julian  Vinson Charles  Simpson R Mark
Institution:1Laboratory of Cancer Biology and Genetics, and ;2Laboratory of Metabolism, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, Bethesda, Maryland
Abstract:Activation of Ras signaling in cardiomyocytes has been linked to pathogenic myocardial hypertrophy progression and subsequent heart failure. Whether cardiomyopathy can regress once initiated needs to be established more fully. A 'tet-off' system was used to regulate expression of H-Ras-G12V in myocardium to examine whether Ras-induced pathogenic myocardial hypertrophy could resolve after removal of Ras signaling in vivo. Ras activation at weaning for 2 wk caused hypertrophy, whereas activation for 4 to 8 wk led to cardiomyopathy and heart failure. Discontinuing H-Ras-G12V transgene expression after cardiomyopathy onset led to improved survival and cardiomyopathy lesion scores, with reduced heart:body weight ratios, demonstrating the reversibility of early pathogenic hypertrophy. Activation of Ras and downstream ERK 1/2 was associated with elevated expression of proliferating cell nuclear antigen and cyclins B1 and D1, indicating cell-cycle activation and reentry. Coordinate elevation of broad-spectrum cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors (p21, p27, and p57) and Tyr15 phosphorylation of cdc2 signified the activation of cell-cycle checkpoints; absence of cell-cycle completion and cardiomyocyte replication were documented by using immunohistochemistry for mitosis and cytokinesis markers. After resolution of cardiomyopathy, cell-cycle activators and inhibitors examined returned to basal levels, a change that we interpreted as exit from the cell cycle. Cardiac cell-cycle regulation plays a role in recovery from pathogenic hypertrophy. The model we present provides a means to further explore the underlying mechanisms governing cell-cycle capacity in cardiomyocytes, as well as progression and regression of pathogenic cardiomyocyte hypertrophy.
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