Cardiomyocyte-specific Fntb deletion induces cardiac fibrosis by triggering senescence via laminA defects, while AAV9-Fntb overexpression reduces fibrosis in high-fat diet mice.
Does farnesyltransferase beta subunit (FNTB) deficiency drive cardiomyocyte senescence and cardiac fibrosis in metabolic heart disease?
Lipid overload suppresses FNTB expression, leading to impaired nuclear integrity, cardiomyocyte senescence, and cardiac fibrosis, identifying farnesylation as a potential therapeutic target in lipotoxic cardiomyopathy.
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Cardiomyocyte senescence contributes to cardiac fibrosis, yet the molecular mechanisms remain unclear. Farnesylation is a post-translational modification critical for cholesterol metabolism and is mediated by the farnesyltransferase beta subunit (FNTB). However, its specific role in cardiomyocyte senescence and cardiac fibrosis remains unclear. Cardiomyocyte-specific Fntb knockout mice were generated to assess cardiac remodeling. RNA sequencing, DNA damage assays, and senescence markers identified molecular pathways. Mechanistic studies included nuclear envelope ultrastructure analysis, laminA assessments. Clinical relevance was assessed via human heart samples from hyperlipidemic patients. In cardiomyocyte-specific Fntb knockout mice, deletion of FNTB induced progressive cardiac fibrosis that preceded hypertrophy development. Pressure overload exacerbated dysfunction in knockouts, revealing fibrosis-dependent vulnerability. Mechanistically, loss of FNTB impaired laminA maturation, destabilized nuclear envelope integrity, and triggered DNA damage response activation, resulting in cardiomyocyte senescence. Senescent cardiomyocytes secreted elevated Tgf-β2 and Gdf15, driving cardiac fibroblast activation. Upstream regulation studies revealed that lipid overload suppressed Fntb transcription via Srebf2 downregulation, recapitulated in hyperlipidemic human hearts showing reduced FNTB expression. Notably, AAV9-mediated Fntb overexpression attenuated cardiac fibrosis in mice fed a high-fat diet. Collectively, our results demonstra that lipid overload suppresses FNTB expression in cardiomyocytes. This deficiency compromises nuclear integrity, triggering a senescence program and driving cardiac fibrosis. These findings uncover a novel mechanism of lipotoxic cardiomyopathy and suggest that farnesylation warrants further investigation as a potential target to fibrotic remodeling in metabolic heart diseases.
Chen et al. (Thu,) reported a other. Cardiomyocyte-specific Fntb deletion induces cardiac fibrosis by triggering senescence via laminA defects, while AAV9-Fntb overexpression reduces fibrosis in high-fat diet mice.