Abstract

Viral infection of the heart is a common but underappreciated cause of heart failure. Viruses can cause direct cardiac damage by lysing infected cardiomyocytes. Inflammatory immune responses that limit viral replication can also indirectly cause damage during infection, making regulatory factors that fine-tune these responses particularly important. Identifying and understanding these factors that regulate cardiac immune responses during infection will be essential for developing targeted treatments for virus-associated heart failure. Our laboratory has discovered Brain Expressed X-linked protein 1 (BEX1) as a novel stress-regulated pro-inflammatory factor in the heart. Here we report that BEX1 plays a cardioprotective role in the heart during viral infection. Specifically, we adopted genetic gain- and loss-of-function strategies to modulate BEX1 expression in the heart in the context of coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3)-induced cardiomyopathy and found that BEX1 limits viral replication in cardiomyocytes. Interestingly, despite the greater viral load observed in mice lacking BEX1, inflammatory immune cell recruitment in the mouse heart was profoundly impaired in the absence of BEX1. Overall, the absence of BEX1 accelerated CVB3-driven heart failure and pathologic heart remodeling. This result suggests that limiting inflammatory cell recruitment has detrimental consequences for the heart during viral infections. Conversely, transgenic mice overexpressing BEX1 in cardiomyocytes revealed the efficacy of BEX1 for counteracting viral replication in the heart in vivo. We also found that BEX1 retains its antiviral role in isolated cells. Indeed, BEX1 was necessary and sufficient to counteract viral replication in both isolated primary cardiomyocytes and mouse embryonic fibroblasts suggesting a broader applicability of BEX1 as antiviral agent that extended to viruses other than CVB3, including Influenza A and Sendai virus. Mechanistically, BEX1 regulated interferon beta (IFN-β) expression in infected cells. Overall, our study suggests a multifaceted role of BEX1 in the cardiac antiviral immune response.

Highlights

  • Cardiac viruses are thought to be a common cause of heart failure

  • Mice lacking Brain Expressed X-linked protein 1 (BEX1) are more susceptible to virus-induced cardiac damage, they have problems recruiting immune cells to the heart, and they have greater difficulty clearing the virus

  • BEX1 maintains its antiviral role in isolated cells and in response to a variety of viruses, which indicates that its antiviral effect is broad and not entirely dependent on the immune system

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Summary

Introduction

Cardiac viruses are thought to be a common cause of heart failure. Viruses can be detected in about 67 percent of patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy, and human and animal studies have demonstrated a causal role for many viruses in cardiac dysfunction [1,2,3]. Among the most prevalent and well-studied cardiotropic viruses in humans is Coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3). Other viruses, including influenza (IAV), parvovirus B19, and cytomegalovirus are known to infect the heart and cause cardiovascular disease [7,8]. Heart failure is one of the most common co-morbidities in patients infected with the emerging severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), further emphasizing the importance of understanding the role of viruses in heart failure [9]

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