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Neonatal hyperoxia inhibits proliferation and survival of atrial cardiomyocytes by suppressing fatty acid synthesis
Ethan David Cohen, … , Gloria S. Pryhuber, Michael A. O’Reilly
Ethan David Cohen, … , Gloria S. Pryhuber, Michael A. O’Reilly
Published January 28, 2021
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2021;6(5):e140785. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.140785.
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Research Article Cardiology

Neonatal hyperoxia inhibits proliferation and survival of atrial cardiomyocytes by suppressing fatty acid synthesis

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Abstract

Preterm birth increases the risk for pulmonary hypertension and heart failure in adulthood. Oxygen therapy can damage the immature cardiopulmonary system and may be partially responsible for the cardiovascular disease in adults born preterm. We previously showed that exposing newborn mice to hyperoxia causes pulmonary hypertension by 1 year of age that is preceded by a poorly understood loss of pulmonary vein cardiomyocyte proliferation. We now show that hyperoxia also reduces cardiomyocyte proliferation and survival in the left atrium and causes diastolic heart failure by disrupting its filling of the left ventricle. Transcriptomic profiling showed that neonatal hyperoxia permanently suppressed fatty acid synthase (Fasn), stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1 (Scd1), and other fatty acid synthesis genes in the atria of mice, the HL-1 line of mouse atrial cardiomyocytes, and left atrial tissue explanted from human infants. Suppressing Fasn or Scd1 reduced HL-1 cell proliferation and increased cell death, while overexpressing these genes maintained their expansion in hyperoxia, suggesting that oxygen directly inhibits atrial cardiomyocyte proliferation and survival by repressing Fasn and Scd1. Pharmacologic interventions that restore Fasn, Scd1, and other fatty acid synthesis genes in atrial cardiomyocytes may, thus, provide a way of ameliorating the adverse effects of supplemental oxygen on preterm infants.

Authors

Ethan David Cohen, Min Yee, George A. Porter Jr., Erin Ritzer, Andrew N. McDavid, Paul S. Brookes, Gloria S. Pryhuber, Michael A. O’Reilly

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Figure 4

Neonatal hyperoxia suppresses genes needed for fatty acid synthesis in atria of mice.

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Neonatal hyperoxia suppresses genes needed for fatty acid synthesis in a...
(A) Volcano plot of log2 fold changes versus log10 P values. Genes with FDR < 0.1 or annotation in the fatty acid metabolism are highlighted. Genes with FDR < 0.1 are marked by blue dots; genes involved in fatty acid metabolism are marked by green dots. (B) Gene ontology (GO) analysis of differentially expressed genes. (C–F) Results of qPCR for Slc25a1, Acly, Acaca, Acacb, Fasn, Scd1, Thrsp, and Elovl6 in atria (C and E) and ventricles (D and E) of hyperoxia-exposed and control mice on P4 (C and D) and P56 (E and F). (A and B) Room air, n = 3; hyperoxia, n = 4. (C–E) Room air, n = 5; hyperoxia, n = 6. (F) Slc25a1, Acly, Acaca, AcacB: room air, n = 5; hyperoxia, n = 5; Scd1, Fasn, Thrsp, Elovl6: room air, n = 4; hyperoxia, n = 4. (C–F) Box plots show median, second quartiles, and third quartiles; whiskers show range. Circles show values for individual control and hyperoxia-exposed mice, respectively. (C–F) *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.005, using unpaired 2-tailed t tests.

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