Litcius/Paper detail

NKRF in Cardiac Fibroblasts Protects against Cardiac Remodeling Post‐Myocardial Infarction via Human Antigen R

Chenghu Guo, Wei Ji, Wei Yang, Qiming Deng, Tengfei Zheng, Zunzhe Wang, Wenhai Sui, Chungang Zhai, Fangpu Yu, Bo Xi, Yu Xiao, Feng Xu, Qunye Zhang, Wencheng Zhang, Kong Jing, Meng Zhang, Cheng Zhang

2023Advanced Science19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Myocardial infarction (MI) remains the leading cause of death worldwide. Cardiac fibroblasts (CFs) are abundant in the heart and are responsible for cardiac repair post-MI. NF-κB-repressing factor (NKRF) plays a significant role in the transcriptional inhibition of various specific genes. However, the NKRF action mechanism in CFs remains unclear in cardiac repair post-MI. This study investigates the NKRF mechanism in cardiac remodeling and dysfunction post-MI by establishing a CF-specific NKRF-knockout (NKRF-CKO) mouse model. NKRF expression is downregulated in CFs in response to pathological cardiac remodeling in vivo and TNF-α in vitro. NKRF-CKO mice demonstrate worse cardiac function and survival and increased infarct size, heart weight, and MMP2 and MMP9 expression post-MI compared with littermates. NKRF inhibits CF migration and invasion in vitro by downregulating MMP2 and MMP9 expression. Mechanistically, NKRF inhibits human antigen R (HuR) transcription by binding to the classical negative regulatory element within the HuR promoter via an NF-κB-dependent mechanism. This decreases HuR-targeted Mmp2 and Mmp9 mRNA stability. This study suggests that NKRF is a therapeutic target for pathological cardiac remodeling.

Topics & Concepts

Myocardial infarctionMMP2Cardiac function curveVentricular remodelingMMP9MedicinePathologicalIn vivoTranscription factorIn vitroKnockout mouseCancer researchDownregulation and upregulationHeart failureInternal medicineCell biologyChemistryBiologyReceptorGeneBiochemistryMetastasisCancerBiotechnologyCardiac Fibrosis and RemodelingSignaling Pathways in DiseasePeptidase Inhibition and Analysis
NKRF in Cardiac Fibroblasts Protects against Cardiac Remodeling Post‐Myocardial Infarction via Human Antigen R | Litcius