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Cardiac macrophages prevent sudden death during heart stress

Medicine and Health

Cardiac macrophages prevent sudden death during heart stress

J. Sugita, K. Fujii, et al.

Discover groundbreaking research by Junichi Sugita and colleagues that explores how macrophages influence cardiac impulse conduction. This study reveals that amphiregulin (AREG) deficiency leads to fatal arrhythmias under stress, highlighting a potential therapeutic target for preventing sudden cardiac death.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Cardiac arrhythmias are a primary contributor to sudden cardiac death, a major unmet medical need. Because right ventricular (RV) dysfunction increases the risk for sudden cardiac death, we examined responses to RV stress in mice. Among immune cells accumulated in the RV after pressure overload-induced by pulmonary artery banding, interfering with macrophages caused sudden death from severe arrhythmias. We show that cardiac macrophages crucially maintain cardiac impulse conduction by facilitating myocardial intercellular communication through gap junctions. Amphiregulin (AREG) produced by cardiac macrophages is a key mediator that controls connexin 43 phosphorylation and translocation in cardiomyocytes. Deletion of Areg from macrophages led to disorganization of gap junctions and, in turn, lethal arrhythmias during acute stresses, including RV pressure overload and β-adrenergic receptor stimulation. These results suggest that AREG from cardiac resident macrophages is a critical regulator of cardiac impulse conduction and may be a useful therapeutic target for the prevention of sudden death.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jul 15, 2021
Authors
Junichi Sugita, Katsuhito Fujii, Yukiteru Nakayama, Takumi Matsubara, Jun Matsuda, Tsukasa Oshima, Yuxiang Liu, Yujin Maru, Eriko Hasumi, Toshiya Koijma, Hiroshi Seno, Keisuke Asano, Ayumu Ishijima, Naoki Tomii, Masatoshi Yamazaki, Fujimi Kudo, Ichiro Sakuma, Ryozo Nagai, Ichiro Manabe, Issei Komuro
Tags
cardiac arrhythmias
macrophages
amphiregulin
gap junctions
sudden cardiac death
arrhythmias
myocardial communication
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