Circulation, Volume 150, Issue Suppl_1, Page A4143847-A4143847, November 12, 2024. Introduction:Our previous studies have shown that sustained activation of the DNA damage response (DDR) in cardiomyocytes leads to p53/p21 activation and cardiac dysfunction. Although the DDR generally involves molecules in DNA replication and repair pathways, the non-proliferative nature of cardiomyocytes suggests a cardio-specific DDR mechanism. However, our understanding of DDR in cardiomyocytes remains limited. Here, we aim to use CRISPR interference (CRISPRi) knockdown screens to identify genes critically involved in DDR regulation in human cardiomyocytes. We hypothesize that identifying these gene clusters may allow us to develop methods to prevent cardiac dysfunction by suppressing DDR in cardiomyocytes.Methods and Results:We established a human iPS cell line stably expressing dCas9-KRAB, which allows CRISPRi-mediated gene knockdown, and differentiated the cells into cardiomyocytes. The resulting human iPS cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSCMs) showed the achievement of approximately 80% knockdown efficiency after gRNA transfection. We stimulated the hiPSCMs with H2O2and quantitatively evaluated the expression levels of the DDR markers γH2AX and p21 by immunostaining using the Operetta®high content imaging system. The DDR markers showed a significant concentration-dependent increase in response to H2O2administration. For arrayed CRISPRi screening, we constructed a gRNA library targeting 437 DDR-related genes. Using this library, we knocked down each DDR-related gene in hiPSCMs followed by H2O2stimulation. We quantified the expression levels of DDR markers by calculating the fluorescence intensity ratios relative to control after gene knockdown, and standardized them to calculate Z scores for all 437 genes. The screening successfully revealed the differential impact of each gene knockdown on γH2AX and p21 expression. We identified 71 genes that significantly affected their expression (Z-score < -1 or > 1). Mapping these genes to DDR pathways highlighted the differential impact of gene knockdown within the same pathway, and stratified their importance in cardiomyocytes.Conclusions:Arrayed CRISPR screening using hiPSCMs revealed differential functional significance of DDR-related genes in cardiomyocytes, identifying 71 genes of particularly significant importance. These findings provide a critical understanding of the cardio-specific DDR pathway and important clues for establishing an appropriate method to suppress DDR in the failing heart.
Risultati per: Nanotubi di DNA per terapie contro i tumori del cervello
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Abstract 4141912: Targeting NEK2 to Induce Senescence and DNA Damage in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension
Circulation, Volume 150, Issue Suppl_1, Page A4141912-A4141912, November 12, 2024. Introduction:Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is characterized by vasoconstriction and vascular remodeling of the distal pulmonary arteries (PAs) leading to progressive elevation of PA pressure, right heart failure and death. Extensive proliferation and resistance to apoptosis of PA smooth muscle cells (PASMCs) is perhaps the most prominent feature of PAH accounting for the histopathological changes seen in this disease. With the recognition of this, direct targeting of vascular remodeling may represent a promising strategy.Goal:To illuminate new actionable targets involved in pulmonary vascular remodeling in PAH.Methods:Molecular, biochemical and pharmacological approaches were used to identify Never In Mitosis A-Related Kinase 2 (NEK2) and study its role in pulmonary vascular remodeling in PAHResults:We performed a comparative RNA-sequencing analysis between control and PAH-PASMCs and then integrated our dataset with publicly available datasets conducted on comparable samples. Among the genes that were concordantly up-regulated in PAH-PASMCs, we identified NEK2, a kinase and druggable target implicated in the progression of mitosis. Using Western blot (WB) and immunofluorescence (IF), we confirmed that NEK2 is upregulated in PASMCs and distal PAs of PAH patients and animal models (Sugen/Hypoxia- and monocrotaline-exposed rats). Pharmacological (NCL0017509) and molecular (siNEK2) inhibition of NEK2 reduced PAH-PASMCs proliferation, as assessed by IF (Ki67 labeling, EdU incorporation, p
Abstract 4147327: Race and Ethnic Differences in Donor-Derived Cell-Free DNA and Gene Expression Profiling in Heart Transplant Recipients in a Negative Biopsy Cohort
Circulation, Volume 150, Issue Suppl_1, Page A4147327-A4147327, November 12, 2024. Introduction:The Donor-Derived Cell-Free DNA-Outcomes AlloMap Registry (D-OAR) study has highlighted the significant capability of dd-cfDNA, showcasing a 97% negative predictive value (NPV) for identifying both acute cellular rejection (ACR) and antibody-mediated rejection (AMR) at a dd-cfDNA threshold of 0.20%. This development has greatly enhanced the range of biomarkers available to clinicians, confirming dd-cfDNA as a reliable clinical biomarker for monitoring heart transplant (HT) recipients. Short and long-term outcomes for African American HT recipients are worse. Given these findings, our study aims to investigate baseline differences in the levels and positivity rates of dd-cfDNA stratified by race in a negative biopsy cohort.Methods:We conducted a single-center retrospective review of all HT recipients from 2019 to 2023 with at least one valid combined dd-cfDNA sample drawn between April 2019 and July 2023. Multiorgan transplant recipients and those without a paired biopsy result were excluded. A positive biopsy result was defined as >= ISHLT grade 1R/1B or pAMR >0. Dd-cfDNA (AlloSure, AS) result was considered positive if ≥0.12%, and as a sub-analysis using a threshold ≥0.20%. A positive peripheral GEP (pGEP, AlloMap, AM) test was defined as >30 in the first five months post-transplant and >34 afterward. Samples associated with a positive biopsy result were excluded. We further stratified our cohort based on race.Results:Of 643 paired dd-cfDNA/GEP samples from 227 patients, the median age was 55 years, and 27% were female. The cohort was stratified into four categories: 53% were white, 18.8% were AA, 20.4% were Hispanic/Latino, and 7.8% were of other races. We observed no baseline differences in the positive dd-cfDNA levels (p=0.39) and positivity rates of dd-cfDNA at a threshold of 0.12% and 0.20% (p=0.08, p=0.06) or GEP positivity rates (p=0.52) between the 4 race categories in our surveillance cohort (Figure 1). Further comparison of patients treated for rejection based on non-invasive monitoring did not reveal a difference.Conclusions:In our surveillance cohort, dd-cfDNA levels and positivity rates were not different between AA and white HT recipients. Further prospective randomized trials are needed to elucidate potential race-related differences in dd-cfDNA levels.
Abstract 4143940: Circulating Mitochondrial DNA: Biomarker and Inflammation Mediator in Cardiac Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury
Circulation, Volume 150, Issue Suppl_1, Page A4143940-A4143940, November 12, 2024. Introduction:Ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury occurs after coronary revascularization, contributing to infarct size. Circulating mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) levels are elevated in acute myocardial infarction (MI) patients, and act as Damage Associated Molecular Patterns (mtDNA DAMP), which are recognized by the Toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9), initiating pro-inflammatory responses. Prior studies have shown that loss of TLR9 prevents I/R injury in isolated mouse hearts. However, mtDNA DAMP levels have not been measured in ST-elevation MI (STEMI) patients, and whether blocking TLR9 in mice can reduce I/R injury remains unknown.Hypothesis:MtDNA DAMP levels serve as markers of STEMI related cardiac injury. Blocking the activation of TLR9 will decrease cardiac I/R injury.Methods:MtDNA DAMP levels in serum were measured pre- and 24 hours post- PCI in 55 STEMI patients and 37 healthy controls by qPCR. To evaluate the role of TLR9 on I/R injury, ODN2088 was used to block TLR9 receptor, wild type and TLR9 germline KO mice were subjected to close-chest I/R surgery with minimal systemic inflammation. The cardiac systolic function and infarct size were assessed. Immune cells were isolated from the injured left ventricle and spleens and detected by flow cytometry.Results:Pre- PCI mtDNA DAMP levels were increased ~200 folds in STEMI patients compared to healthy controls. After PCI, the elevated mtDNA DAMP levels reduced significantly, while the troponin T levels increased, suggesting mtDNA is an early marker of MI. Compared with negative ODN, ODN2088 treatment at reperfusion reduced infarct size and total leukocytes, myeloid cells, neutrophils and TNF-α+cells, and a trend of reduced IL-1β+cells, and there was no difference in IL-6+cells, total macrophages and residential macrophages. Loss of TLR9 in male and female mice significantly reduced infarct size by ~40% and preserved the systolic function. Meanwhile, there is no difference between genders.Conclusions:Circulating mtDNA DAMP level is an early marker of STEMI and may predict the success of PCI. Blocking the mtDNA DAMP-TLR9 signaling pathway during reperfusion significantly reduces I/R injury, indicating it is a viable therapy to mitigate cardiac I/R injury after prompt coronary revascularization.
Abstract 4146137: Cell-free DNA Analysis Profiles End-Organ Injury and Predicts Outcomes with Left Ventricular Assist Device Implantation
Circulation, Volume 150, Issue Suppl_1, Page A4146137-A4146137, November 12, 2024. Introduction:Durable left ventricular assist devices (LVADs) improve survival in heart failure but carry high risks of infection, hemocompatibility-related adverse events (HRAE), and death. Current clinical tools use subjective assessments or do not incorporate changes in end-organ injury, limiting their prognostic value with these complications. Plasma cell-free DNA (cfDNA), a potential marker for systemic and tissue-specific injury, holds promise to enhance patient risk stratification and prognosis.Hypothesis:LVAD implantation decreases systemic and end-organ injury, measured by cfDNA.Goal:We aimed to assess changes in global and organ-specific injury patterns with LVAD implantation via cfDNA, and to determine if pre-LVAD cfDNA levels predict post-LVAD complications.Methods:We prospectively recruited 40 LVAD candidates and 40 healthy controls. Pre- and post-LVAD plasma samples were analyzed for nuclear cfDNA (ncfDNA) and mitochondrial cfDNA (mtcfDNA) using digital droplet PCR. Tissue-specific cfDNA levels were measured using bisulfite sequencing and a deconvolution algorithm with a DNA methylation library. Wilcoxon sign-rank tests were used to compare cfDNA levels, and log-rank tests were used to compare outcomes. The clinical outcomes were HRAE-free survival (major bleeding, stroke, device thrombosis, death), and post-LVAD infection. Random forest machine learning analysis ranked tissue-specific cfDNA to identify the tissue patterns of those who develop HRAE and those who develop infection.Results:Prior to LVAD implantation, patients had 4-fold higher ncfDNA and 2-fold higher mtcfDNA compared to healthy controls. After LVAD placement, ncfDNA (18980 vs. 10228 copies/mL, p < .001) and mtcfDNA levels (1051882 vs 579609 copies/mL, p < .001) nearly halved, with significant reductions in innate immune and liver cfDNA (Figure). High pre-LVAD ncfDNA levels were associated with worse HRAE-free survival (p = .035) and infection (p < .001). Tissue sources important in determining HRAEs were distinct from those related to infections.Conclusion:LVAD placement significantly improves systemic and tissue-specific injury, measured by reductions in cfDNA. While pre-LVAD cfDNA levels predict both post-LVAD HRAEs and infections, the cfDNA tissue contributions influencing these outcomes are distinct. Future studies will need to validate these findings and compare cfDNA to other predictors of poor LVAD outcomes.
Abstract 4144019: Early total cell-free DNA, but not donor fraction, predicts late events in heart transplantation
Circulation, Volume 150, Issue Suppl_1, Page A4144019-A4144019, November 12, 2024. Introduction:Donor fraction (DF) cell-free DNA (cfDNA) is an emerging tool for non-invasive rejection surveillance in heart transplantation (HTx). Little is known about the significance of DF and/or total cfDNA (TcfDNA) in the first month post HTx. We explored the relationship between early cfDNA results and later clinical events in adult and pediatric HTx recipients.Aims:1. Explore the relationship between early cfDNA levels and late events after HTx 2. Describe the decline in DF during the first month post HTxMethods:Retrospective data from the multicenter prospective blinded DTRT study (DNA-based transplant rejection test) was used. DF and TcfDNA results from samples drawn post HTx day 1 (35d to 1 year post HTx. Captured events include cardiac arrest, mechanical circulatory support or death. Exclusions included absent TcfDNA, multiorgan Tx, any PTLD, or other cancer in previous 2 yrs. Cell-free DNA values were compared across event groups and time windows using GEE (generalized estimating equation) with Max Likelihood Estimation.Results:190 subjects had 566 samples drawn < 35 days post HTx. Median age was 17.8 yrs with a range of 26 days - 73.4 yrs; 51.8% were pediatric. 16 subjects (8.4%) had events bridging or following day 35 post HTx; 23 with events prior to day 35 were included as non-event subjects. TcfDNA was significantly higher in event subjects on days 4, 7 and 28 post HTx. [Fig 1]. There was no difference in DF between event and non-event subjects. Median (IQR) DF at 14 days was 0.26% (0.20, 0.39) and 0.19% (0.13, 0.29) at 28 days.Conclusions:Elevated TcfDNA, even in the setting of normal DF, may be a useful early marker to identify patients at risk for later events in the first year post HTx. The majority of patients reach low DF levels by 28 days post HTx suggesting an opportunity to incorporate cfDNA earlier into rejection surveillance protocols.
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