Abstract
- Top of page
- Abstract
- The paper explained
- INTRODUCTION
- RESULTS
- DISCUSSION
- MATERIALS AND METHODS
- Author contributions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Supporting Information
Wnt/β-catenin signalling controls adult heart remodelling in part via regulation of cardiac progenitor cell (CPC) differentiation. An enhanced understanding of mechanisms controlling CPC biology might facilitate the development of new therapeutic strategies in heart failure. We identified and characterized a novel cardiac interaction between Krueppel-like factor 15 and components of the Wnt/β-catenin pathway leading to inhibition of transcription. In vitro mutation, reporter assays and co-localization analyses revealed that KLF15 requires both the C-terminus, necessary for nuclear localization, and a minimal N-terminal regulatory region to inhibit transcription. In line with this, functional Klf15 knock-out mice exhibited cardiac β-catenin transcriptional activation along with functional cardiac deterioration in normal homeostasis and upon hypertrophy. We further provide in vivo and in vitro evidences for preferential endothelial lineage differentiation of CPCs upon KLF15 deletion. Via inhibition of β-catenin transcription, KLF15 controls CPC homeostasis in the adult heart similar to embryonic cardiogenesis. This knowledge may provide a tool for reactivation of this apparently dormant CPC population in the adult heart and thus be an attractive approach to enhance endogenous cardiac repair.
The paper explained
- Top of page
- Abstract
- The paper explained
- INTRODUCTION
- RESULTS
- DISCUSSION
- MATERIALS AND METHODS
- Author contributions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Supporting Information
Heart failure is characterized by an imbalanced myocardial damage and repair. Unfortunately, the therapeutic modalities to prevent heart failure are currently limited. It is now well accepted that regeneration events occur in the adult mammalian hearts during normal aging and disease. Although low levels of cardiomyocyte renewal are detectable in the adult heart, promising pharmaceutical or genetic therapy approaches could be developed to enhance this effect. Therefore, the elucidation of cardiac progenitor cell contribution to cardiac homeostasis, aging and injury along with the molecular signalling directing these events is essential to help to promote postnatal cardiac regeneration. Thus, we need to focus our efforts to explore these processes to benefit from endogenous mechanisms and to be able to exploit them therapeutically. Wnt/β-catenin pathway is essential for embryonic cardiogenesis and for normal cardiac homeostasis and remodelling. Therefore, this pathway is a good candidate to be investigated in endogenous CPC biology.
The present study provides a detailed biochemical and functional analysis of a novel interaction between a member of the KLF family (KLF15) and Wnt-pathway components, which leads to repression of the Wnt transcriptional activity. We clearly show the presence of two important domains within the KLF15 protein sequence, a minimal N-terminal region and the C-terminus, which are essential for β-catenin/TCF4 transcriptional repression in cardiac cells. Moreover, using a genetic model we report the role of KLF15 in the regulation of the CPC biology in the postnatal heart in vivo and in vitro. Klf15 knockout mice exhibit a de-repression of β-catenin/TCF4 transcription. This shifts the cell fate of cardiovascular progenitors towards an endothelial lineage antagonizing cardiogenic cell formation in the healthy and stressed heart, similar to what has been observed in embryonic development. Moreover, the endothelial cell fate shift can be reversed upon inhibition of the Wnt activation in vitro, which demonstrated that KLF15 controls CPCs cell fate via regulation of β-catenin transcription.
This work may have identified a novel molecular switch to therapeutically modulate CPC fate and unlock the regenerative potential of the adult heart. It might help to prevent massive cardiac loss upon injury. Specifically, our observations highlight the role of KLF15 in controlling the early specification of the progenitor pool to specifically generate different cardiovascular cellular subtypes in the postnatal heart. This observation is of relevance given the fact that KLF15 is expressed in the human heart and is known to be dysregulated upon prohypertrophic stimuli. The present data help us to understand the biological processes leading to formation of cardiovascular cells from resident precursors, which may have critical implications in the control of heart homeostasis and its adaptation to pathologic states.
INTRODUCTION
- Top of page
- Abstract
- The paper explained
- INTRODUCTION
- RESULTS
- DISCUSSION
- MATERIALS AND METHODS
- Author contributions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Supporting Information
A couple of studies have shown the capacity of adult mammalian heart cells to proliferate especially after injury (Beltrami et al, 2001; Bergmann et al, 2009; Hsieh et al, 2007; Kajstura et al, 2004). Specific groups of putative cardiac progenitor cell (CPC) populations have been identified and characterized including c-kit (Beltrami et al, 2003), Islet-1 (Laugwitz et al, 2005; Moretti et al, 2006; Wang et al, 2006), Sca1 (Oh et al, 2003), side population cells (Pfister et al, 2005, 2010) and cardiac neural crest-derived cells (Tomita et al, 2005). However, some studies showed insignificant rate of cardiac proliferation (Rubart & Field, 2006). Nonetheless, the extent to which these cells contribute to tissue homeostasis and/or repair as well as the signalling pathways controlling their proliferation and differentiation remains unclear. This scenario leads to a lack of robust endogenous cardiac regeneration to replace the infarcted myocardium. Therefore, understanding the mechanisms that control progenitor cells during normal cardiac homeostasis and repair is the basis for developing new therapeutic strategies to activate these cells for effective regeneration.
The notion that genes involved in early cardiogenesis may be re-employed to protect or regenerate heart muscle has motivated efforts to understand early developmental pathways (Epstein & Parmacek, 2005; Oka et al, 2007). One important factor regulating progenitor cell biology during early cardiogenesis is the canonical Wnt/β-catenin pathway. Active Wnt/β-catenin signalling induces the stabilization of cytosolic β-catenin, which then associates with lymphoid enhancer factor and T-cell factor, such as transcription factor 7-like 2 (TCF7L2 or TCF4) to form a transcription complex that activates Wnt target genes. This cascade is subject to multiple levels of negative control where, among others, the Nemo-like kinase (NLK) play an important role by interacting with and phosphorylating TCF to repress β-catenin/TCF-mediated transcription (Ishitani et al, 2003). Wnt/β-catenin signalling controls maintenance, proliferation and differentiation of embryonic cardiovascular progenitors in a multi-phasic fashion. Initially, Wnt/β-catenin pathway has a positive effect on embryonic mesodermal cell activation and proliferation. Subsequent inactivation is required for proper differentiation into functional cardiomyocytes while default activation leads the cells to a haemangioblast lineage (Gessert & Kuhl, 2010; Naito et al, 2006; Ueno, 2007). Interestingly, gene expression profiling analysis indicated a participation of Wnt signalling also in pathological myocardial remodelling (LaFramboise et al, 2005; Toischer et al, 2010). We previously demonstrated that cardiac β-catenin downregulation is required for adaptive hypertrophy and enhances endogenous CPC cardiomyogenic differentiation after infarction (Baurand et al, 2007; Zelarayan et al, 2008). Collectively, the available data argues strongly for a pivotal role of Wnt/β-catenin signalling in embryogenic and postnatal heart.
Krueppel-like factors (KLF) are a large family of zinc finger-containing transcription factors involved in diverse arrays of cellular processes including regulation of cell differentiation, cardiac remodelling, haematopoiesis, angiogenesis and stem cell-fate determination by interacting with co-activators and co-repressors (Kaczynski et al, 2003). Recent studies revealed the important role of KLF15 as a central regulator of stress response and repressor of pathological cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis by controlling factors such as GATA binding protein 4 (GATA4), myocyte enhancer factor-2 (MEF2), myocardin (Fisch et al, 2007; Leenders et al, 2010) and the transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) (Wang et al, 2008), respectively. However, the role of KLF15 in stem cell biology of the adult heart remains unexplored.
Here, we report a novel interaction between KLF15 and components of the Wnt pathway resulting in an inhibition of β-catenin/TCF-transcriptional activity in cardiac cells. The biological role of this interaction was investigated in vitro and in vivo in the postnatal hearts of mice with a global KLF15 functional deletion. These mice exhibited a cardiac β-catenin/TCF-transcriptional de-repression and cardiac dysfunction. Deletion of KLF15 results in a constitutive β-catenin transcriptional activation that directs the CPCs to an endothelial phenotype. Collectively, our data underscore the relevance of KLF15 and the Wnt/β-catenin pathway for cardiac cellular homeostasis.