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Ectopic expression of Cdk8 induces eccentric hypertrophy and heart failure
Duane D. Hall, Jessica M. Ponce, Biyi Chen, Kathryn M. Spitler, Adrianne Alexia, Gavin Y. Oudit, Long-Sheng Song, Chad E. Grueter
Duane D. Hall, Jessica M. Ponce, Biyi Chen, Kathryn M. Spitler, Adrianne Alexia, Gavin Y. Oudit, Long-Sheng Song, Chad E. Grueter
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Research Article Cardiology

Ectopic expression of Cdk8 induces eccentric hypertrophy and heart failure

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Abstract

Widespread changes in cardiac gene expression occur during heart failure, yet the mechanisms responsible for coordinating these changes remain poorly understood. The Mediator complex represents a nodal point for modulating transcription by bridging chromatin-bound transcription factors with RNA polymerase II activity; it is reversibly regulated by its cyclin-dependent kinase 8 (Cdk8) kinase submodule. Here, we identified increased Cdk8 protein expression in human failing heart explants and determined the consequence of this increase in cardiac-specific Cdk8-expressing mice. Transgenic Cdk8 overexpression resulted in progressive dilated cardiomyopathy, heart failure, and premature lethality. Prior to functional decline, left ventricular cardiomyocytes were dramatically elongated, with disorganized transverse tubules and dysfunctional calcium handling. RNA sequencing results showed that myofilament gene isoforms not typically expressed in adult cardiomyocytes were enriched, while oxidative phosphorylation and fatty acid biosynthesis genes were downregulated. Interestingly, candidate upstream transcription factor expression levels and MAPK signaling pathways thought to determine cardiomyocyte size remained relatively unaffected, suggesting that Cdk8 functions within a novel growth regulatory pathway. Our findings show that manipulating cardiac gene expression through increased Cdk8 levels is detrimental to the heart by establishing a transcriptional program that induces pathological remodeling and eccentric hypertrophy culminating in heart failure.

Authors

Duane D. Hall, Jessica M. Ponce, Biyi Chen, Kathryn M. Spitler, Adrianne Alexia, Gavin Y. Oudit, Long-Sheng Song, Chad E. Grueter

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Figure 4

Structural analyses reveal that cardiomyocytes from Cdk8-transgenic mice are considerably eccentric, with abnormal T-tubules, sarcomeres, and mitochondria.(A–E) Eccentric cardiomyocytes with disorganized T-tubules constitute Cdk8-transgenic hearts.

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Structural analyses reveal that cardiomyocytes from Cdk8-transgenic mice...
(A) Representative confocal micrographs of left ventricular epicardia from 4-week-old WT, Tg8a, and Tg8b animals imaged with the fluorescent membrane dye FM-4-64. Images below are enlarged views of boxed areas on top row. Punctate domains of FM-4-64 staining on myocyte membrane mark T-tubular invaginations. Scale bar: 50 μm. (B–E) Summary box plots of myocyte length (B), width (C), length-width ratios (D), and T-tubular integrity analysis (E) of WT (gray), Tg8a (magenta), and Tg8b (cyan) hearts. *P < 0.001; vs. age-matched WT; §P < 0.001 vs. age-matched Tg8a, 1-way ANOVA with Tukey’s multiple comparisons test, n = 30–50 images from 3–5 hearts. The box plots depict the minimum and maximum values (whiskers), the upper and lower quartiles, and the median. The length of the box represents the interquartile range. (F) Representative electron micrographs of 3-week-old WT and Tg8a littermate ventricular tissue. Compared with WT, Tg8a sarcomeres lacked discernible M-lines (M) between adjacent Z-lines (Z). Scale bar: 2 μm. (G) Summary box plot analyses of electron micrographs from WT (black) and Tg8a (magenta) ventricles measuring mitochondrial mean density, area, and minor/major axis ration for roundness. The box plots depict the minimum and maximum values (whiskers), the upper and lower quartiles, and the median. The length of the box represents the interquartile range. Individual mitochondrial were traced and measured using ImageJ. *P < 0.05, t test, n = 3 hearts, > 1,600 mitochondria from 9–11 images.

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