Cardiac unloading in heart failure is associated with persistent deregulation of metabolic transcriptional programs, suggesting an epigenetic memory that hampers true myocardial recovery.
Does cardiac unloading reverse transcriptional and metabolic alterations in the failing heart?
Mouse model of reversible transverse aortic constriction (rTAC) and human LV samples from HF patients undergoing LVAD therapy
Cardiac unloading
Transcriptional programs implicated in mitochondrial respiration, fatty acid and acyl-CoA metabolismsurrogate
Cardiac unloading leaves an epigenetic scar that prevents full metabolic and transcriptional recovery of the failing heart, highlighting potential new therapeutic targets.
Understanding the factors involved in myocardial recovery after unloading is of utmost importance to unveil new therapies in patients with heart failure (HF). Lack of myocardial recovery might be explained by long-lasting molecular alterations which persist despite normalization of cardiac stress. In this issue of Epigenetics, Roth et al. present an elegant translational study addressing this important aspect at the molecular level. By leveraging a mouse model of reversible transverse aortic constriction (rTAC) and human LV samples from HF patients undergoing LVAD therapy, the authors show that cardiac unloading is associated with a persistent deregulation of transcriptional programmes implicated in mitochondrial respiration, fatty acid and acyl-CoA metabolism, suggesting a long-lasting metabolic deterioration of the failing heart. Of interest, the authors identified several chromatin remodellers (Hdac4, Smarca2, and Brd4) potentially explaining the observed transcriptional alterations. Taken together, these novel findings suggest that 'DNA forgives but does not forget,' thus leaving an epigenetic scar which hampers the recovery of the failing heart after unloading. Disentangling the epigenetic factors involved in such 'transcriptional memory' may set the stage for new interventions resetting the cardiomyocyte transcriptome and myocardial energetics thus fostering a true myocardial recovery in HF.
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Sarah Costantino
Heart Failure & Transplant
Francesco Paneni
Preventive Cardiology
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Costantino et al. (Mon,) conducted a editorial in Heart failure. Cardiac unloading was evaluated on Transcriptional programmes implicated in mitochondrial respiration, fatty acid and acyl-CoA metabolism. Cardiac unloading in heart failure is associated with persistent deregulation of metabolic transcriptional programs, suggesting an epigenetic memory that hampers true myocardial recovery.
synapsesocial.com/papers/699a9dcd482488d673cd3ff4 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5167/uzh-291787
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