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Publication : MCP-1-induced protein attenuates post-infarct cardiac remodeling and dysfunction through mitigating NF-κB activation and suppressing inflammation-associated microRNA expression.

First Author  Niu J Year  2015
Journal  Basic Res Cardiol Volume  110
Issue  3 Pages  26
PubMed ID  25840774 Mgi Jnum  J:288153
Mgi Id  MGI:6430084 Doi  10.1007/s00395-015-0483-8
Citation  Niu J, et al. (2015) MCP-1-induced protein attenuates post-infarct cardiac remodeling and dysfunction through mitigating NF-kappaB activation and suppressing inflammation-associated microRNA expression. Basic Res Cardiol 110(3):26
abstractText  MCP-1-induced protein (MCPIP, also known as ZC3H12A) has recently been uncovered to act as a negative regulator of inflammation. Expression of MCPIP was elevated in the ventricular myocardium of patients with ischemic heart failure. However, the role of MCPIP in the development of post-infarct cardiac inflammation and remodeling is unknown. The objective of the present study was to investigate whether MCPIP exerts an inhibitory effect on the cardiac inflammatory response and adverse remodeling after myocardial infarction (MI). Mice with cardiomyocyte-specific expression of MCPIP and their wild-type littermates (FVB/N) were subjected to permanent ligation of left coronary artery. The levels of MCPIP were significantly increased in the ischemic myocardium and sustained for 4 weeks after MI. Acute infarct size was comparable between groups. However, constitutive overexpression of MCPIP in the murine heart resulted in improved survival rate, decreased cardiac hypertrophy, less of fibrosis and scar formation, and better cardiac performance at 28 days after MI, along with a markedly reduced monocytic cell infiltration, less cytokine expression, decreased caspase-3/7 activities and apoptotic cell death compared to the wild-type hearts. Cardiomyocyte-specific expression of MCPIP also attenuated activation of cardiac NF-kappaB signaling and expression of inflammation-associated microRNAs (miR-126, -146a, -155, and -199a) when compared with the post-infarct wild-type hearts. In vitro, MCPIP expression suppressed hypoxia-induced NF-kappaB-luciferase activity in cardiomyocytes. In conclusion, MCPIP expression in the ischemic myocardium protects against adverse cardiac remodeling and dysfunction following MI by modulation of local myocardial inflammation, possibly through mitigating NF-kappaB signaling and suppressing inflammation-associated microRNA expression.
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