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Protease-activated receptor 2 deficiency mediates cardiac fibrosis and diastolic dysfunction

Authors :
Bernhard H. Rauch
Konstantinos Savvatis
Peter Bobbert
Ursula Rauch
Verena Moos
Carsten Tschöpe
Michael Gotthardt
Dirk Lassner
Heinz-Peter Schutheiss
Marco Witkowski
Stephan B. Felix
Termeh Tabaraie
Andrea Dörner
Alice Weithauser
Michael H. Radke
Max Wegner
Ulf Landmesser
Julian Friebel
Mario Kasner
Diana Bösel
Source :
European heart journal. 40(40)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Aims Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) and pathological cardiac aging share a complex pathophysiology, including extracellular matrix remodelling (EMR). Protease-activated receptor 2 (PAR2) deficiency is associated with EMR. The roles of PAR1 and PAR2 have not been studied in HFpEF, age-dependent cardiac fibrosis, or diastolic dysfunction (DD). Methods and results Evaluation of endomyocardial biopsies from patients with HFpEF (n = 14) revealed that a reduced cardiac PAR2 expression was associated with aggravated DD and increased myocardial fibrosis (r = −0.7336, P = 0.0028). In line, 1-year-old PAR2-knockout (PAR2ko) mice suffered from DD with preserved systolic function, associated with an increased age-dependent α-smooth muscle actin expression, collagen deposition (1.7-fold increase, P = 0.0003), lysyl oxidase activity, collagen cross-linking (2.2-fold increase, P = 0.0008), endothelial activation, and inflammation. In the absence of PAR2, the receptor-regulating protein caveolin-1 was down-regulated, contributing to an augmented profibrotic PAR1 and transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β)-dependent signalling. This enhanced TGF-β/PAR1 signalling caused N-proteinase (ADAMTS3) and C-proteinase (BMP1)-related increased collagen I production from cardiac fibroblasts (CFs). PAR2 overexpression in PAR2ko CFs reversed these effects. The treatment with the PAR1 antagonist, vorapaxar, reduced cardiac fibrosis by 44% (P = 0.03) and reduced inflammation in a metabolic disease model (apolipoprotein E-ko mice). Patients with HFpEF with upstream PAR inhibition via FXa inhibitors (n = 40) also exhibited reduced circulating markers of fibrosis and DD compared with patients treated with vitamin K antagonists (n = 20). Conclusions Protease-activated receptor 2 is an important regulator of profibrotic PAR1 and TGF-β signalling in the heart. Modulation of the FXa/FIIa-PAR1/PAR2/TGF-β-axis might be a promising therapeutic approach to reduce HFpEF.

Details

ISSN :
15229645
Volume :
40
Issue :
40
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European heart journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....860c2d48e5f69e3fa2676778394d38f7