Does CAMK2D inhibition improve cardiac function and prevent sudden cardiac death in models of RBM20 cardiomyopathy?
Mouse models of RBM20 cardiomyopathy (Rbm20 KO, Rbm20/Camk2d DKO, Rbm20-p.Arg636Gln KI, Rbm20-p.Pro635Leu KI) and human iPS cell-derived cardiomyocytes with RBM20 variants.
Genetic deletion of Camk2d, AAV9-mediated reexpression of CAMK2D splice variants, or pharmacological inhibition with hesperadin (2.5 μg or 5 μg/kg for 4 weeks).
Wild-type mice, Rbm20 KO mice, or vehicle (DMSO) treated mice.
Cardiac function (ejection fraction, LVIDd, E/e') and survival after epinephrine/caffeine-induced arrhythmia.surrogate
CAMK2D overactivation, rather than mis-splicing alone, drives heart failure in RBM20 cardiomyopathy, making CAMK2D inhibition a promising therapeutic target.
Although heart disease arises from different etiologies, treatment remains largely one-size-fits-all, leaving many patients without optimal benefit, which highlights the need for cause-directed therapies. Pathogenic variants in RBM20, a cardiac splicing factor, lead to an aggressive form of dilated cardiomyopathy with high risk of ventricular arrhythmias. We hypothesized that the splicing target calcium/calmodulin-dependent kinase II delta (CAMK2D) is disease causing in RBM20 cardiomyopathy. Here we show that Rbm20/Camk2d double knockout mice are protected from heart failure and sudden cardiac death. In Rbm20-deficient hearts, phosphorylation of CAMK2D targets was increased, indicating that RBM20 loss results not only in mis-splicing of Camk2d transcripts but also in functional activation of CAMK2D signaling. Reexpression of individual CAMK2D splice variants in Rbm20/Camk2d double knockout mice reintroduced cardiac dysfunction, demonstrating that overactivation, rather than mis-splicing, drives disease. Treatment of Rbm20-p.Arg636Gln knockin mice with the ATP-competitive CAMK2 inhibitor hesperadin improved cardiac function. These findings identify CAMK2D overactivation as a central mechanism in RBM20 cardiomyopathy and support CAMK2D inhibition as a promising cause-directed therapy.
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Maarten M. G. van den Hoogenhof
Javier Duran
Thiago Britto-Borges
Nature Cardiovascular Research
Stanford University
Heidelberg University
University Hospital Heidelberg
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Hoogenhof et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69fc2ba98b49bacb8b34797e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s44161-026-00818-2