Enhanced expression of DYRK1A in cardiomyocytes inhibits acute NFAT activation but does not prevent hypertrophy in vivo

2011 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Grebe, Cornelia, Theda-Maria Klingebiel, Simon Philipp Grau, Karl Toischer, Michael Didie, Claudius Jacobshagen, Christian Dullin, Gerd Hasenfuß, and Tim Seidler. "Enhanced expression of DYRK1A in cardiomyocytes inhibits acute NFAT activation but does not prevent hypertrophy in vivo​." ​Cardiovascular Research ​90, no. 3 (2011): ​521​-528​. ​https://doi.org/10.1093/cvr/cvr023.

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Authors
Grebe, Cornelia; Klingebiel, Theda-Maria; Grau, Simon Philipp; Toischer, Karl ; Didie, Michael ; Jacobshagen, Claudius ; Dullin, Christian ; Hasenfuß, Gerd ; Seidler, Tim 
Abstract
Aims The calcineurin and nuclear factor of activated T cells (NFAT) pathway can mediate pro-hypertrophic signalling in the heart. Recently, it has been shown that dual-specificity tyrosine phosphorylation-regulated kinase 1A (DYRK1A) phosphorylates NFAT, which limits calcineurin/NFAT signal transduction in T cells and hypertrophy in cultured cardiomyocytes. The hypothesis tested in this study was that DYRK1A prevents calcineurin/NFAT-mediated cardiac hypertrophy in vivo. Methods and results In cultured rat cardiomyocytes, adenovirus-mediated overexpression of DYRK1A antagonized calcineurin-mediated nuclear NFAT translocation and the phenylephrine-induced hypertrophic growth response. To test the ability of DYRK1A to reduce hypertrophic cardiac growth in vivo, we created tetracycline-repressible Dyrk1a transgenic mice to avoid the cardiac developmental defects associated with embryonic DYRK1A expression. However, in the mouse model, histological determination of myocyte diameter, heart weight/body weight ratio, and echocardiographic measurements revealed that myocardial expression of DYRK1A failed to reduce hypertrophy induced via aortic banding or co-expression of calcineurin. This discrepancy is explained, at least in part, by insufficient long-term inhibition of NFAT and the activation of DYRK1A-resistant maladaptive genes in vivo. Conclusion Isolated augmentation of DYRK1A can be compensated for in vivo, and this may significantly limit anti-hypertrophic interventions aimed at enhancing DYRK1A activity.
Issue Date
2011
Publisher
Oxford Univ Press
Journal
Cardiovascular Research 
ISSN
0008-6363

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