Autophagy protects cardiomyocytes from the myocardial ischaemia-reperfusion injury through the clearance of CLP36
Author(s) -
Shiguo Li,
Chao Liu,
Lei Gu,
Lina Wang,
Yongliang Shang,
Qiong Liu,
Junyi Wan,
Jian Shi,
Fang Wang,
Zhiliang Xu,
Guangju Ji,
Wei Li
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
open biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.078
H-Index - 53
ISSN - 2046-2441
DOI - 10.1098/rsob.160177
Subject(s) - autophagy , myofibril , biology , ischemia , reperfusion injury , myocyte , medicine , microbiology and biotechnology , regulator , cardiac fibrosis , knockout mouse , fibrosis , cardiology , endocrinology , apoptosis , biochemistry , receptor , gene
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of the death worldwide. An increasing number of studies have found that autophagy is involved in the progression or prevention of CVD. However, the precise mechanism of autophagy in CVD, especially the myocardial ischaemia-reperfusion injury (MI/R injury), is unclear and controversial. Here, we show that the cardiomyocyte-specific disruption of autophagy by conditional knockout of Atg7 leads to severe contractile dysfunction, myofibrillar disarray and vacuolar cardiomyocytes. A negative cytoskeleton organization regulator, CLP36, was found to be accumulated in Atg7-deficient cardiomyocytes. The cardiomyocyte-specific knockout of Atg7 aggravates the MI/R injury with cardiac hypertrophy, contractile dysfunction, myofibrillar disarray and severe cardiac fibrosis, most probably due to CLP36 accumulation in cardiomyocytes. Altogether, this work reveals autophagy may protect cardiomyocytes from the MI/R injury through the clearance of CLP36, and these findings define a novel relationship between autophagy and the regulation of stress fibre in heart.
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