Early sarcomere and metabolic defects in a zebrafish pitx2c cardiac arrhythmia model

Sarcomeres 0301 basic medicine Transcriptional profiling Cardiomyopathy Antioxidants Mitochondria, Heart Animals, Genetically Modified Electrocardiography 03 medical and health sciences Cardiac development Cardiac Conduction System Disease Stress, Physiological Faculty of Science Animals /dk/atira/pure/core/keywords/TheFacultyOfScience Zebrafish Homeodomain Proteins Arrhythmias, Cardiac Zebrafish Proteins Acetylcysteine Disease Models, Animal Gene Expression Regulation Larva Cardiomyopathies Cardiac metabolism Transcription Factors
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1913905116 Publication Date: 2019-11-09T01:59:20Z
ABSTRACT
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common type of cardiac arrhythmia. The major AF susceptibility locus 4q25 establishes long-range interactions with the promoter of PITX2 , a transcription factor gene with critical functions during cardiac development. While many AF-linked loci have been identified in genome-wide association studies, mechanistic understanding into how genetic variants, including those at the 4q25 locus, increase vulnerability to AF is mostly lacking. Here, we show that loss of pitx2c in zebrafish leads to adult cardiac phenotypes with substantial similarities to pathologies observed in AF patients, including arrhythmia, atrial conduction defects, sarcomere disassembly, and altered cardiac metabolism. These phenotypes are also observed in a subset of pitx2c +/− fish, mimicking the situation in humans. Most notably, the onset of these phenotypes occurs at an early developmental stage. Detailed analyses of pitx2c loss- and gain-of-function embryonic hearts reveal changes in sarcomeric and metabolic gene expression and function that precede the onset of cardiac arrhythmia first observed at larval stages. We further find that antioxidant treatment of pitx2c −/− larvae significantly reduces the incidence and severity of cardiac arrhythmia, suggesting that metabolic dysfunction is an important driver of conduction defects. We propose that these early sarcomere and metabolic defects alter cardiac function and contribute to the electrical instability and structural remodeling observed in adult fish. Overall, these data provide insight into the mechanisms underlying the development and pathophysiology of some cardiac arrhythmias and importantly, increase our understanding of how developmental perturbations can predispose to functional defects in the adult heart.
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