Inactivation of Sox9 in fibroblasts reduces cardiac fibrosis and inflammation
0301 basic medicine
Cardiology
Myocardial Infarction
Down-Regulation
Cicatrix
Mice
Ventricular Dysfunction, Left
03 medical and health sciences
Cell Movement
Leukocytes
Animals
RNA-Seq
Cell Proliferation
Inflammation
Mice, Knockout
Myocardium
Extracellular matrix
Fibroblasts
Cardiovascular disease
Fibrosis
Extracellular Matrix
3. Good health
Gene Expression Regulation
Proteolysis
Transcription
DOI:
10.1172/jci.insight.126721
Publication Date:
2019-07-16T16:00:38Z
AUTHORS (16)
ABSTRACT
Fibrotic scarring drives the progression of heart failure after myocardial infarction (MI). Therefore, the development of specific treatment regimens to counteract fibrosis is of high clinical relevance. The transcription factor SOX9 functions as an important regulator during embryogenesis, but recent data point towards an additional causal role in organ fibrosis. We show here that SOX9 is upregulated in the scar after MI in mice. Fibroblast specific deletion of Sox9 ameliorated MI-induced left ventricular dysfunction, dilatation and myocardial scarring in vivo. Unexpectedly, deletion of Sox9 also potently eliminated persisting leukocyte infiltration of the scar in the chronic phase after MI. RNA-sequencing from the infarct scar revealed that Sox9 deletion in fibroblasts resulted in strongly downregulated expression of genes related to extracellular matrix, proteolysis and inflammation. Importantly, Sox9 deletion in isolated cardiac fibroblasts in vitro similarly affected gene expression as in the cardiac scar and reduced fibroblast proliferation, migration and contraction capacity. Together, our data demonstrate that fibroblast SOX9 functions as a master regulator of cardiac fibrosis and inflammation and might constitute a novel therapeutic target during MI.
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