Molecular and Functional Alterations in a Mouse Cardiac Model of Friedreich Ataxia

Male Mice, Knockout 0301 basic medicine 0303 health sciences Gene Expression Profiling Myocardium Eukaryotic Initiation Factor-2 610 Apoptosis Cardiomegaly Activating Transcription Factor 4 Models, Biological 3. Good health Disease Models, Animal Mice 03 medical and health sciences Friedreich Ataxia Iron-Binding Proteins Heart Function Tests Autophagy Animals Humans Female Myocytes, Cardiac Amino Acids
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajpath.2013.05.032 Publication Date: 2013-07-23T00:32:19Z
ABSTRACT
Friedreich ataxia (FA) is a neurodegenerative and cardiodegenerative disease resulting from marked frataxin deficiency. The condition is characterized by ataxia with fatal cardiomyopathy, but the pathogenic mechanisms are unclear. We investigated the association between gene expression and progressive histopathological and functional changes using the muscle creatine kinase conditional frataxin knockout (KO) mouse; this mouse develops a severe cardiac phenotype that resembles that of FA patients. We examined KO mice from 3 weeks of age, when they are asymptomatic, to 10 weeks of age, when they die of the disease. Positive iron staining was identified in KO mice from 5 weeks of age, with markedly reduced cardiac function from 6 weeks. We identified an early and marked up-regulation of a gene cohort responsible for stress-induced amino acid biosynthesis and observed markedly increased phosphorylation of eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2α (p-eIF2α), an activator of the integrated stress response, in KO mice at 3 weeks of age, relative to wild-type mice. Importantly, the eIF2α-mediated integrated stress response has been previously implicated in heart failure via downstream processes such as autophagy and apoptosis. Indeed, expression of a panel of autophagy and apoptosis markers was enhanced in KO mice. Thus, the pathogenesis of cardiomyopathy in FA correlates with the early and persistent eIF2α phosphorylation, which precedes activation of autophagy and apoptosis.
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