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January
13, 2005
UCSD Medical Researchers Discover Molecular
Pathway That Turns A Juvenile Heart Into An Adult Heart
By Sue Pondrom
Researchers at
the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine have
discovered the molecular sequence of events in mice that turn
a juvenile heart into an adult heart capable of responding to
increased workloads.
Published
as the cover story in the January 14, 2005 issue of the journal
Cell, the study identifies a protein called ASF/SF2
as a regulator of a calcium enzyme responsible for heart contraction
and tissue growth. Mice born with mutated or absent ASF/SF2
had shortened contractive fiber that appeared locked in a contracted
state, leading to sudden death. When ASF/SF2 was normal, heart
development progressed normally.
“The cascade
of molecular events that we have uncovered are directly relevant
to understanding heart physiology during development, and may
provide insights into mechanisms that directly contribute to
heart attacks in humans,” said the study’s senior
author, Xiang-Dong Fu, Ph.D., a UCSD professor of Cellular and
Molecular Medicine.
ASF/SF2 are part of
a family of proteins that function in a vital cellular process
called alternative splicing – the mechanism through which
a single gene can generate several kinds of proteins by selecting
different combinations of the same set of amino acid building
blocks. Alternative splicing occurs at all stages of development,
including the period of transition from juvenile to adult life,
when many tissues and organs, such as the heart, become mature.
Although alternative splicing is widely known, little is understood
about how this process occurs in mammals. In a “Preview”
appearing in the January 14, 2005 issue of Cell, Thomas
A. Cooper of the Departments of Pathology and Molecular and
Cellular Biology at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, noted
that the results by Fu’s team “highlight the huge
potential and largely unexplored role for alternative splicing
during vertebrate development.”
The UCSD researchers
used mouse models and sophisticated laboratory procedures in
their studies. Mice developed without ASF/SF2 appeared normal
at birth, but developed a notable decrease in heart contraction
as they neared adulthood. Examining the contractile apparatus
in the mutant heart, the investigators found striking structural
defects, including shortened contractile tissue called sarcomeres
and altered ridges in heart tissue. Follow-up functional studies
at the single cell level uncovered a marked alteration in calcium
handling, which is a major regulatory function for muscle contraction.
Additional findings pointed to an increase in the expression
of genes related to excessive cardiac tissue growth (hypertrophy)
and fiber growth (fibrosis), which are indicators of a heart
condition called dilated cardiomyopathy.
Interestingly, the
researchers also found differences in male versus female mice.
The male animals experienced greater disease and died earlier
than the females with mutated ASF/SF2.
The UCSD study was
funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Additional
authors were Xiangdong Xu, B.S., UCSD Department of Cellular
and Molecular Medicine, and Dongmei Yang, Ph.D., National Institute
on Aging, NIH, co-first authors; and Jian-Hua Ding, Ph.D., Huan-You
Wang, Ph.D., Zhen Ye, B.S., UCSD Department of Cellular and
Molecular Medicine; Wang Wang, Ph.D., Rui-Ping Xiao, Ph.D.,
and Heping Cheng, Ph.D., National Institute on Aging, NIH; Pao-Hsien
Chu, Ph.D., Nancy D. Dalton, B.S. and Ju Chen, Ph.D., UCSD Department
of Medicine and Institute of Molecular Medicine; John R. Bermingham,
Jr. Ph.D., Forrest Liu, B.S. and Michael G. Rosenfeld, M.D.,
UCSD Department of Medicine and Howard Hughes Medical Institute;
and James L. Manley, Ph.D., Department of Biological Sciences,
Columbia University, New York.
Media Contact: Sue
Pondrom (619) 543-6163
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