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Modulating the tension-time integral of the cardiac twitch prevents dilated cardiomyopathy in murine hearts
Joseph D. Powers, Kristina B. Kooiker, Allison B. Mason, Abigail E. Teitgen, Galina V. Flint, Jil C. Tardiff, Steven D. Schwartz, Andrew D. McCulloch, Michael Regnier, Jennifer Davis, Farid Moussavi-Harami
Joseph D. Powers, Kristina B. Kooiker, Allison B. Mason, Abigail E. Teitgen, Galina V. Flint, Jil C. Tardiff, Steven D. Schwartz, Andrew D. McCulloch, Michael Regnier, Jennifer Davis, Farid Moussavi-Harami
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Research Article Cardiology

Modulating the tension-time integral of the cardiac twitch prevents dilated cardiomyopathy in murine hearts

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Abstract

Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is often associated with sarcomere protein mutations that confer reduced myofilament tension–generating capacity. We demonstrated that cardiac twitch tension-time integrals can be targeted and tuned to prevent DCM remodeling in hearts with contractile dysfunction. We employed a transgenic murine model of DCM caused by the D230N-tropomyosin (Tm) mutation and designed a sarcomere-based intervention specifically targeting the twitch tension-time integral of D230N-Tm hearts using multiscale computational models of intramolecular and intermolecular interactions in the thin filament and cell-level contractile simulations. Our models predicted that increasing the calcium sensitivity of thin filament activation using the cardiac troponin C (cTnC) variant L48Q can sufficiently augment twitch tension-time integrals of D230N-Tm hearts. Indeed, cardiac muscle isolated from double-transgenic hearts expressing D230N-Tm and L48Q cTnC had increased calcium sensitivity of tension development and increased twitch tension-time integrals compared with preparations from hearts with D230N-Tm alone. Longitudinal echocardiographic measurements revealed that DTG hearts retained normal cardiac morphology and function, whereas D230N-Tm hearts developed progressive DCM. We present a computational and experimental framework for targeting molecular mechanisms governing the twitch tension of cardiomyopathic hearts to counteract putative mechanical drivers of adverse remodeling and open possibilities for tension-based treatments of genetic cardiomyopathies.

Authors

Joseph D. Powers, Kristina B. Kooiker, Allison B. Mason, Abigail E. Teitgen, Galina V. Flint, Jil C. Tardiff, Steven D. Schwartz, Andrew D. McCulloch, Michael Regnier, Jennifer Davis, Farid Moussavi-Harami

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Figure 5

Ventricular remodeling and dysfunction in D230N hearts is prevented by expression of L48Q cTnC.

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Ventricular remodeling and dysfunction in D230N hearts is prevented by e...
Echocardiographic measurements from mice of 2 to 5 months of age reveal that the left ventricular diastolic (A) and systolic (B) inner diameter (LVIDD and LVIDS, respectively) of D230N hearts (blue) progressively increase with age, whereas those of DTG hearts (red) do not change with age and are not significantly different from WT (green) at any age. The fractional shortening (C) and ejection fraction (D) also progressively worsen with age in D230N hearts, whereas those in DTG hearts remain approximately constant and do not significantly differ from WT. * indicates P < 0.05 for D230N vs. WT and + indicates P < 0.05 for D230N vs. DTG using a 1-way ANOVA and a Tukey’s post hoc test of significance. Error bars represent the SEM. See Supplemental Table 3 for all values and sample sizes. cTnC, cardiac troponin C; DTG, double-transgenic.

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