Diphtheria Toxin-induced Autophagic Cardiomyocyte Death Plays a Pathogenic Role in Mouse Model of Heart Failure

It is still not clear whether loss of cardiomyocytes through programmed cell death causes heart failure. To clarify the role of cell death in heart failure, we generated transgenic mice (TG) that express human diphtheria toxin receptor in the hearts. A mosaic expression pattern of the transgene was...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of biological chemistry 2004-09, Vol.279 (39), p.41095-41103
Hauptverfasser: Akazawa, Hiroshi, Komazaki, Shinji, Shimomura, Hiroaki, Terasaki, Fumio, Zou, Yunzeng, Takano, Hiroyuki, Nagai, Toshio, Komuro, Issei
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:It is still not clear whether loss of cardiomyocytes through programmed cell death causes heart failure. To clarify the role of cell death in heart failure, we generated transgenic mice (TG) that express human diphtheria toxin receptor in the hearts. A mosaic expression pattern of the transgene was observed, and the transgene-expressing cardiomyocytes (17.3% of the total cardiomyocytes) were diffusely scattered throughout the ventricles. Intramuscular injection of diphtheria toxin induced complete elimination of the transgene-expressing cardiomyocytes within 7 days, and ∼80% of TG showed pathophysiological features characteristic of heart failure and were dead within 14 days. Degenerated cardiomyocytes of the TG heart showed characteristic features indicative of autophagic cell death such as up-regulated lysosomal markers and abundant autophagosomes containing cytosolic organelles like cardiomyocytes of human dilated cardiomyopathy. The heart failure-inducible TG are a useful model for dilated cardiomyopathy, and provided evidence indicating that myocardial cell loss through autophagic cell death plays of a causal role in the pathogenesis heart failure.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M313084200