Recombinant neuregulin 1 does not activate cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis in normal or infarcted adult mice.

Neuregulin 1 signaling plays an important role in cardiac trabecular development, and in sustaining functional integrity in adult hearts. Treatment with neuregulin 1 enhances adult cardiomyocyte differentiation, survival and/or function in vitro and in vivo. It has also been suggested that recombina...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sean Reuter, Mark H Soonpaa, Anthony B Firulli, Audrey N Chang, Loren J Field
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4278834?pdf=render
id doaj-c69ed058fd7c4bc3b1f31fdedd4e58f4
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c69ed058fd7c4bc3b1f31fdedd4e58f42020-11-24T21:35:12ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01912e11587110.1371/journal.pone.0115871Recombinant neuregulin 1 does not activate cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis in normal or infarcted adult mice.Sean ReuterMark H SoonpaaAnthony B FirulliAudrey N ChangLoren J FieldNeuregulin 1 signaling plays an important role in cardiac trabecular development, and in sustaining functional integrity in adult hearts. Treatment with neuregulin 1 enhances adult cardiomyocyte differentiation, survival and/or function in vitro and in vivo. It has also been suggested that recombinant neuregulin 1β1 (NRG1β1) induces cardiomyocyte proliferation in normal and injured adult hearts. Here we further explore the impact of neuregulin 1 signaling on adult cardiomyocyte cell cycle activity.Adult mice were subjected to 9 consecutive daily injections of recombinant NRG1β1 or vehicle, and cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis was quantitated via bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation, which was delivered using mini-osmotic pumps over the entire duration of NRG1β1 treatment. NRG1β1 treatment inhibited baseline rates of cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis in normal mice (cardiomyocyte labelling index: 0.019±0.005% vs. 0.003±0.001%, saline vs. NRG1β1, P<0.05). Acute NRG1β1 treatment did result in activation of Erk1/2 and cardiac myosin regulatory light chain (down-stream mediators of neuregulin signalling), as well as activation of DNA synthesis in non-cardiomyocytes, validating the biological activity of the recombinant protein. In other studies, mice were subjected to permanent coronary artery occlusion, and cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis was monitored via tritiated thymidine incorporation which was delivered as a single injection 7 days post-infarction. Daily NRG1β1 treatment had no impact on cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis in the infarcted myocardium (cardiomyocyte labelling index: 0.039±0.011% vs. 0.027±0.021%, saline vs. NRG1β1, P>0.05).These data indicate that NRG1β1 treatment does not increase cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis (and consequently does not increase the rate of cardiomyocyte renewal) in normal or infarcted adult mouse hearts. Thus, any improvement in cardiac structure and function observed following neuregulin treatment of injured hearts likely occurs independently of overt myocardial regeneration.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4278834?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sean Reuter
Mark H Soonpaa
Anthony B Firulli
Audrey N Chang
Loren J Field
spellingShingle Sean Reuter
Mark H Soonpaa
Anthony B Firulli
Audrey N Chang
Loren J Field
Recombinant neuregulin 1 does not activate cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis in normal or infarcted adult mice.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Sean Reuter
Mark H Soonpaa
Anthony B Firulli
Audrey N Chang
Loren J Field
author_sort Sean Reuter
title Recombinant neuregulin 1 does not activate cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis in normal or infarcted adult mice.
title_short Recombinant neuregulin 1 does not activate cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis in normal or infarcted adult mice.
title_full Recombinant neuregulin 1 does not activate cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis in normal or infarcted adult mice.
title_fullStr Recombinant neuregulin 1 does not activate cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis in normal or infarcted adult mice.
title_full_unstemmed Recombinant neuregulin 1 does not activate cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis in normal or infarcted adult mice.
title_sort recombinant neuregulin 1 does not activate cardiomyocyte dna synthesis in normal or infarcted adult mice.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Neuregulin 1 signaling plays an important role in cardiac trabecular development, and in sustaining functional integrity in adult hearts. Treatment with neuregulin 1 enhances adult cardiomyocyte differentiation, survival and/or function in vitro and in vivo. It has also been suggested that recombinant neuregulin 1β1 (NRG1β1) induces cardiomyocyte proliferation in normal and injured adult hearts. Here we further explore the impact of neuregulin 1 signaling on adult cardiomyocyte cell cycle activity.Adult mice were subjected to 9 consecutive daily injections of recombinant NRG1β1 or vehicle, and cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis was quantitated via bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation, which was delivered using mini-osmotic pumps over the entire duration of NRG1β1 treatment. NRG1β1 treatment inhibited baseline rates of cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis in normal mice (cardiomyocyte labelling index: 0.019±0.005% vs. 0.003±0.001%, saline vs. NRG1β1, P<0.05). Acute NRG1β1 treatment did result in activation of Erk1/2 and cardiac myosin regulatory light chain (down-stream mediators of neuregulin signalling), as well as activation of DNA synthesis in non-cardiomyocytes, validating the biological activity of the recombinant protein. In other studies, mice were subjected to permanent coronary artery occlusion, and cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis was monitored via tritiated thymidine incorporation which was delivered as a single injection 7 days post-infarction. Daily NRG1β1 treatment had no impact on cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis in the infarcted myocardium (cardiomyocyte labelling index: 0.039±0.011% vs. 0.027±0.021%, saline vs. NRG1β1, P>0.05).These data indicate that NRG1β1 treatment does not increase cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis (and consequently does not increase the rate of cardiomyocyte renewal) in normal or infarcted adult mouse hearts. Thus, any improvement in cardiac structure and function observed following neuregulin treatment of injured hearts likely occurs independently of overt myocardial regeneration.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4278834?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT seanreuter recombinantneuregulin1doesnotactivatecardiomyocytednasynthesisinnormalorinfarctedadultmice
AT markhsoonpaa recombinantneuregulin1doesnotactivatecardiomyocytednasynthesisinnormalorinfarctedadultmice
AT anthonybfirulli recombinantneuregulin1doesnotactivatecardiomyocytednasynthesisinnormalorinfarctedadultmice
AT audreynchang recombinantneuregulin1doesnotactivatecardiomyocytednasynthesisinnormalorinfarctedadultmice
AT lorenjfield recombinantneuregulin1doesnotactivatecardiomyocytednasynthesisinnormalorinfarctedadultmice
_version_ 1725946064568057856