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Ablation of C-type natriuretic peptide/cGMP signaling in fibroblasts exacerbates adverse cardiac remodeling in mice
Franziska Werner, … , Hideo A. Baba, Michaela Kuhn
Franziska Werner, … , Hideo A. Baba, Michaela Kuhn
Published May 25, 2023
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2023;8(13):e160416. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.160416.
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Research Article Cardiology

Ablation of C-type natriuretic peptide/cGMP signaling in fibroblasts exacerbates adverse cardiac remodeling in mice

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Abstract

Excessive activation of cardiac fibroblasts (CFs) in response to injury provokes cardiac fibrosis, stiffness, and failure. The local mediators counterregulating this response remain unclear. Exogenous C-type natriuretic peptide (CNP) exerts antifibrotic effects in preclinical models. To unravel the role of the endogenous hormone, we generated mice with fibroblast-restricted deletion (KO) of guanylyl cyclase-B (GC-B), the cGMP-synthesizing CNP receptor. CNP activated GC-B/cGMP signaling in human and murine CFs, preventing proliferative and promigratory effects of angiotensin II (Ang II) and TGF-β. Fibroblast-specific GC-B–KO mice showed enhanced fibrosis in response to Ang II infusions. Moreover, after 2 weeks of mild pressure overload induced by transverse aortic constriction (TAC), such KO mice had augmented cardiac fibrosis and hypertrophy, together with systolic and diastolic contractile dysfunction. This was associated with increased expression of the profibrotic genes encoding collagen I, III, and periostin. Notably, such responses to Ang II and TAC were greater in female as compared with male KO mice. Enhanced Ang II–induced CNP expression in female hearts and augmented GC-B expression and activity in female CFs may contribute to this sex disparity. The results show that paracrine CNP signaling in CFs has antifibrotic and antihypertrophic effects. The CNP/GC-B/cGMP pathway might be a target for therapies combating pathological cardiac remodeling.

Authors

Franziska Werner, Estefania Prentki Santos, Konstanze Michel, Hanna Schrader, Katharina Völker, Tamara Potapenko, Lisa Krebes, Marco Abeßer, Dorothe Möllmann, Martin Schlattjan, Hannes Schmidt, Boris V. Skryabin, Katarina Špiranec Spes, Kai Schuh, Christopher P. Denton, Hideo A. Baba, Michaela Kuhn

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Figure 6

Effect of surgical transverse aortic constriction (TAC) for 14 days on cardiac remodeling of Fibro GC-B–KO and control littermate mice.

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Effect of surgical transverse aortic constriction (TAC) for 14 days on c...
(A) Left ventricular (LV) weight–to-BW ratios. Sham: 4 control and 5 KO males, 4 control and 4 KO females. TAC: 4 males and 5 females per genotype. (B) Cardiomyocyte cross-sectional areas were determined on PAS-stained LV sections. For sham, 1 section/heart and for TAC, 2 sections/heart were evaluated (~100 myocytes per section). (C) Interstitial collagen fractions were determined on 2 Sirius red–stained sections from each left ventricle. (D–G) qRT-PCR analyses of LV mRNA expression of collagen 1 (Col1a1), collagen 3 (Col3a1), connective tissue growth factor (CTGF), and periostin. Values are the ratios of mRNA levels relative to S12, expressed as x-fold vs. sham mice. Studies were performed with 2 LV samples from each mouse. Sham: 2 male and 4 female control mice; TAC: 4 control and 4 KO males, 5 control and 4 KO females. *P < 0.05 vs. sham, #P < 0.05 vs. control mice (myocyte areas: 1-way ANOVA; all others: 2-way ANOVA followed by Tukey’s multiple-comparison test).

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