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Prelamin A mediates myocardial inflammation in dilated and HIV-associated cardiomyopathies
Daniel Brayson, Andrea Frustaci, Romina Verardo, Cristina Chimenti, Matteo Antonio Russo, Robert Hayward, Sadia Ahmad, Gema Vizcay-Barrena, Andrea Protti, Peter S. Zammit, Cristobal G. dos Remedios, Elisabeth Ehler, Ajay M. Shah, Catherine M. Shanahan
Daniel Brayson, Andrea Frustaci, Romina Verardo, Cristina Chimenti, Matteo Antonio Russo, Robert Hayward, Sadia Ahmad, Gema Vizcay-Barrena, Andrea Protti, Peter S. Zammit, Cristobal G. dos Remedios, Elisabeth Ehler, Ajay M. Shah, Catherine M. Shanahan
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Research Article AIDS/HIV Cardiology

Prelamin A mediates myocardial inflammation in dilated and HIV-associated cardiomyopathies

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Abstract

Cardiomyopathies are complex heart muscle diseases that can be inherited or acquired. Dilated cardiomyopathy can result from mutations in LMNA, encoding the nuclear intermediate filament proteins lamin A/C. Some LMNA mutations lead to accumulation of the lamin A precursor, prelamin A, which is disease causing in a number of tissues, yet its impact upon the heart is unknown. Here, we discovered myocardial prelamin A accumulation occurred in a case of dilated cardiomyopathy, and we show that a potentially novel mouse model of cardiac-specific prelamin A accumulation exhibited a phenotype consistent with inflammatory cardiomyopathy, which we observed to be similar to HIV-associated cardiomyopathy, an acquired disease state. Numerous HIV protease therapies are known to inhibit ZMPSTE24, the enzyme responsible for prelamin A processing, and we confirmed that accumulation of prelamin A occurred in HIV+ patient cardiac biopsies. These findings (a) confirm a unifying pathological role for prelamin A common to genetic and acquired cardiomyopathies; (b) have implications for the management of HIV patients with cardiac disease, suggesting protease inhibitors should be replaced with alternative therapies (i.e., nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors); and (c) suggest that targeting inflammation may be a useful treatment strategy for certain forms of inherited cardiomyopathy.

Authors

Daniel Brayson, Andrea Frustaci, Romina Verardo, Cristina Chimenti, Matteo Antonio Russo, Robert Hayward, Sadia Ahmad, Gema Vizcay-Barrena, Andrea Protti, Peter S. Zammit, Cristobal G. dos Remedios, Elisabeth Ehler, Ajay M. Shah, Catherine M. Shanahan

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Figure 2

Targeted transgenesis of prelamin A led to nuclear accumulation in CMs and resulted in premature death in mice.

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Targeted transgenesis of prelamin A led to nuclear accumulation in CMs a...
(A) Schematic representation showing the site of prelamin A (LMNA-L647R) cDNA insertion and the modifications required for conditional expression. SA, splice acceptor site; neoR, neomycin resistance; pA, polyadenylation signal. (B) Western blotting for prelamin A showing expression was restricted to heart tissue. (C) Confocal micrographs of myocardium stained for prelamin A showing nuclear rim localization in csPLA-Tg hearts. Scale bar: 10 μm. Arrows indicate prelamin A expressing nuclei. (C) Growth curves showing that csPLA-Tg mice stop growing after 30 days. n = 3 males/group. Two-way ANOVA with repeated measures with Sidak’s post hoc test for multiple comparisons was performed. *P < 0.05, ***P < 0.001. (D) Kaplan-Meier survival analysis showing that csPLA-Tg male and female mice exhibited attenuated survival compared with FLctrl counterparts. n = 7 FLctrl males, 8 FLctrl females, 9 csPLA-Tg males, 8 csPLA-Tg females. Log-rank Mantel-Cox test was performed. P < 0.0001.

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