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Nrf2 enhances myocardial clearance of toxic ubiquitinated proteins.

Authors :
Wang, Wenjuan
Li, Siying
Wang, Hui
Li, Bin
Shao, Lei
Lai, Yimu
Horvath, Gary
Wang, Qian
Yamamoto, Masayuki
Janicki, Joseph S.
Wang, Xing Li
Tang, Dongqi
Cui, Taixing
Source :
Journal of Molecular & Cellular Cardiology. Jul2014, Vol. 72, p305-315. 11p.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Abstract: Nuclear factor erythroid-2 related factor 2 (Nrf2) is a master transcription factor that controls the basal and inducible expression of a battery of antioxidant genes and other cytoprotective phase II detoxifying enzymes. While knockout of Nrf2 exaggerates cardiac pathological remodeling and dysfunction in diverse pathological settings, pharmacological activation of Nrf2 protects against cardiomyocyte injury and cardiac dysfunction. In contrast, there is also a concern that the chronic activation of Nrf2 secondary to oxidative stress is a contributing mechanism for the reductive stress-mediated heart failure. However, a direct link between cardiac specific activation of Nrf2 and cardiac protection or dysfunction in vivo remains to be established. Therefore, we investigated the effect of cardiomyocyte-specific transgenic activation of Nrf2 (Nrf2ctg) on cardiac pathological remodeling and dysfunction. We found that the cardiomyocyte-specific activation of Nrf2 suppressed myocardial oxidative stress as well as cardiac apoptosis, fibrosis, hypertrophy, and dysfunction in a setting of sustained pressure overload induced by transverse aortic arch constriction (TAC) in mice. Notably, the constitutive activation of Nrf2 increased the steady level of autophagosomes while decreasing the ubiquitinated protein aggregates in the heart after TAC. Nrf2 gene gain- and loss-of-function approaches revealed that Nrf2 enhances autophagosome formation and autophagic flux in cardiomyocytes. Unexpectedly, while Nrf2 minimally regulated apoptosis, it suppressed significantly the proteotoxic necrosis in cardiomyocytes. In addition, Nrf2 attenuated the proteocytotoxicity presumably via enhancing autophagy-mediated clearance of ubiquitinated protein aggregates in cardiomyocytes. Taken together, we demonstrated for the first time that cardiac specific activation of Nrf2 suppresses cardiac maladaptive remodeling and dysfunction most likely by enhancing autophagic clearance of toxic protein aggregates in the heart. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00222828
Volume :
72
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Molecular & Cellular Cardiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
96218815
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.yjmcc.2014.04.006