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Paracrine signalling by cardiac calcitonin controls atrial fibrogenesis and arrhythmia

Authors :
Shoumo Bhattacharya
George Krasopoulos
Abhijit Takawale
Adam J. Mead
Patrice Naud
Manuel Mayr
Keith M. Channon
Stanley Nattel
Rana Sayeed
Angela Lee
Constantinos Psarros
David A. Menassa
Charles Redwood
Neil Evans
Michele V Clarke
Martin Sirois
Jean-Claude Tardif
Satadru K. Lahiri
Javier Barallobre-Barreiro
Svetlana Reilly
Agne Antanaviciute
Barbara Casadei
Alexander J Sparrow
Neil Ashley
Rachel A Davey
Neelam Mehta
Lucia Moreira
Patricia K Russell
Mohit Hulsurkar
Konstantinos Theofilatos
Paul Robinson
Jeffrey D Zajac
Marc Antoine Gillis
Mary Norris
Alison Simmons
Xander H.T. Wehrens
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Atrial fibrillation, the most common cardiac arrhythmia, is an important contributor to mortality and morbidity, and particularly to the risk of stroke in humans1. Atrial-tissue fibrosis is a central pathophysiological feature of atrial fibrillation that also hampers its treatment; the underlying molecular mechanisms are poorly understood and warrant investigation given the inadequacy of present therapies2. Here we show that calcitonin, a hormone product of the thyroid gland involved in bone metabolism3, is also produced by atrial cardiomyocytes in substantial quantities and acts as a paracrine signal that affects neighbouring collagen-producing fibroblasts to control their proliferation and secretion of extracellular matrix proteins. Global disruption of calcitonin receptor signalling in mice causes atrial fibrosis and increases susceptibility to atrial fibrillation. In mice in which liver kinase B1 is knocked down specifically in the atria, atrial-specific knockdown of calcitonin promotes atrial fibrosis and increases and prolongs spontaneous episodes of atrial fibrillation, whereas atrial-specific overexpression of calcitonin prevents both atrial fibrosis and fibrillation. Human patients with persistent atrial fibrillation show sixfold lower levels of myocardial calcitonin compared to control individuals with normal heart rhythm, with loss of calcitonin receptors in the fibroblast membrane. Although transcriptome analysis of human atrial fibroblasts reveals little change after exposure to calcitonin, proteomic analysis shows extensive alterations in extracellular matrix proteins and pathways related to fibrogenesis, infection and immune responses, and transcriptional regulation. Strategies to restore disrupted myocardial calcitonin signalling thus may offer therapeutic avenues for patients with atrial fibrillation.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f9999cd8190f6e07716216a1cedd93bf