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TEAD1 protects against necroptosis in postmitotic cardiomyocytes through regulation of nuclear DNA-encoded mitochondrial genes

Authors :
Jie Li
Meixiang Xiang
Jian Shen
Hongyi Zhou
Brynn N. Akerberg
Wenxia Ma
Zurong Fu
Jinhua Liu
Jiqian Xu
Weiqin Chen
Guoqing Hu
Islam Osman
Xiangqin He
Zeqi Zheng
Kunzhe Dong
Wang Wang
Wenjuan Wang
Quansheng Du
William T. Pu
Liang Wang
Huabo Su
Jiliang Zhou
Wei Zhang
Tong Wen
Source :
Cell Death Differ
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group UK, 2021.

Abstract

The Hippo signaling effector, TEAD1 plays an essential role in cardiovascular development. However, a role for TEAD1 in postmitotic cardiomyocytes (CMs) remains incompletely understood. Herein we reported that TEAD1 is required for postmitotic CM survival. We found that adult mice with ubiquitous or CM-specific loss of Tead1 present with a rapid lethality due to an acute-onset dilated cardiomyopathy. Surprisingly, deletion of Tead1 activated the necroptotic pathway and induced massive cardiomyocyte necroptosis, but not apoptosis. In contrast to apoptosis, necroptosis is a pro-inflammatory form of cell death and consistent with this, dramatically higher levels of markers of activated macrophages and pro-inflammatory cytokines were observed in the hearts of Tead1 knockout mice. Blocking necroptosis by administration of necrostatin-1 rescued Tead1 deletion-induced heart failure. Mechanistically, genome-wide transcriptome and ChIP-seq analysis revealed that in adult hearts, Tead1 directly activates a large set of nuclear DNA-encoded mitochondrial genes required for assembly of the electron transfer complex and the production of ATP. Loss of Tead1 expression in adult CMs increased mitochondrial reactive oxygen species, disrupted the structure of mitochondria, reduced complex I-IV driven oxygen consumption and ATP levels, resulting in the activation of necroptosis. This study identifies an unexpected paradigm in which TEAD1 is essential for postmitotic CM survival by maintaining the expression of nuclear DNA-encoded mitochondrial genes required for ATP synthesis.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell Death Differ
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....58e7d00b6b550ccae20a335ef2971c45