Familial dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) caused by mutations in sarcomeric proteins have been extensively studied in vitro , however less is known about DCM caused by alterations in non-sarcomeric genes like Lamin A (LMNA). LMNA is a ubiquitously expressed nuclear intermediate filament protein that regulates nuclear structure, chromatin access and gene expression. LMNA mutations account for 6% of DCM, and affected patients develop drug-therapy resistant severe heart failure and lethal arrythmias that are not amenable to currently available therapies. Most identified LMNA-cardiomyopathy mutations have been associated with severely depressed cardiac systolic function in patients and cardiomyocyte hypocontractility in vitro . However, the underlying mechanisms are incompletely understood. This project examines the mechanisms by which a patient-derived pathogenic mutation, LMNA R190W, leads to cardiac dysfunction at the cellular and tissue levels. We hypothesize that LMNA R190W mutation causes dysregulated expression of calcium handling genes, eventually leading to altered contractility. First, we investigated early disease pathogenesis using iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes. Intriguingly, single cardiomyocyte traction force microscopy studies showed cardiomyocyte hypercontractility, and calcium flux assays revealed prolonged calcium transients. Second, in human engineered heart muscle tissues, LMNA CMs were also consistently hypercontractile. Through gene expression studies, we identified upregulation of a cardiac-specific sarcomeric calcium regulator, calsequestrin 2 (CASQ2), which modulates intracellular calcium availability and localization, and thereby indirectly impacts calcium-dependent contraction and electrophysiology. siRNA-mediated knockdown of CASQ2 in iPSC-CMs decreased cellular calcium content, suggesting Casq2 is necessary for increased calcium and contractility in LMNA R190W cells. These findings suggest that in the initial stages of LMNA R190W-associated cardiomyopathy, cardiomyocyte contractility is not diminished, but actually augmented, and this may be related to aberrant calcium handling. We posit that chronic inappropriate calcium overload may eventually lead to cell death, and predispose to cardiomyopathy. Understanding the initial processes driving the development of LMNA cardiomyopathy will inform more accurate mechanism-based subclassification of mutations, and the rational development of precision therapies.
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