Natural killer cells exacerbate ischemic heart failure after acute myocardial infarction by promoting cardiomyocyte apoptosis, whereas their depletion limits injury and improves cardiac function.
Does depletion or deletion of NK cells reduce adverse cardiac remodeling and improve cardiac function following acute myocardial infarction?
Mice with acute myocardial infarction and human ischemic heart tissue
Genetic deletion or pharmacological depletion of NK cells; NK cell activation using anti-NKG2A monoclonal antibody
Control (implied)
Cardiomyocyte apoptosis, adverse ventricular remodeling, and cardiac functionsurrogate
NK cells play a detrimental role following acute myocardial infarction by promoting cardiomyocyte apoptosis and adverse remodeling, suggesting they may be a novel therapeutic target.
Ischemic heart failure remains a major clinical challenge, underscoring the need to better understand post-infarction immune mechanisms and identify new therapeutic targets. Both innate and adaptive immunity contribute to adverse cardiac remodeling following myocardial infarction (MI), yet the role of cytotoxic cells such as natural killer (NK) cells remains poorly defined. Here, we show that after acute MI in mice, NK cells are recruited to the ischemic myocardium in a CCR2-dependent manner and become activated. Activated NK cells locally release granzyme B, promoting cardiomyocyte apoptosis, adverse ventricular remodeling, and impaired cardiac function. Genetic deletion or pharmacological depletion of NK cells reduces cardiomyocyte death, attenuates inflammation, limits myocardial injury, and improves cardiac function. In contrast, NK cell activation using an anti-NKG2A monoclonal antibody exacerbates ischemic heart failure. We further demonstrate that NK cells regulate bone marrow myelopoiesis through local GM-CSF production. Finally, we identify a distinct NK cellular and transcriptomic signature in human ischemic heart tissue at early stages. Together, these findings reveal a detrimental role for NK cells following acute MI and highlight NK cells as potential therapeutic targets to limit adverse cardiac remodeling.
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Raphael M. Cohen
Vincent Duval
Rida Al-Rifai
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Cohen et al. (Wed,) reported a other. Natural killer cells exacerbate ischemic heart failure after acute myocardial infarction by promoting cardiomyocyte apoptosis, whereas their depletion limits injury and improves cardiac function.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d8967d6c1944d70ce07e96 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.48620/96733