학술논문

Tissue-specific small heat shock protein 20 activation is not associated with traditional autophagy markers in Ossabaw swine with cardiometabolic heart failure.
Document Type
Article
Source
American Journal of Physiology: Heart & Circulatory Physiology. Nov2020, Vol. 319 Issue 5, p1036-1043. 8p.
Subject
*HEAT shock proteins
*HEART failure
*AUTOPHAGY
*TRICEPS
*SWINE
Language
ISSN
0363-6135
Abstract
Tissue-specific small heat shock protein 20 activation is not associated with traditional autophagy markers in Ossabaw swine with cardiometabolic heart failure. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 319: H1036-H1043, 2020. First published September 18, 2020; doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00580.2020.-- The small heat shock protein 20 (HSPB6) emerges as a potential upstream mediator of autophagy. Although autophagy is linked to several clinical disorders, how HSPB6 and autophagy are regulated in the setting of heart failure (HF) remains unknown. The goal of this study was to assess the activation of the HSPB6 and its association with other well-established autophagy markers in central and peripheral tissues from a preclinical Ossabaw swine model of cardiometabolic HF induced by Western diet and chronic cardiac pressure overload. We hypothesized HSPB6 would be activated in central and peripheral tissues, stimulating autophagy. We found that autophagy in the heart is interrupted at various stages of the process in a chamber- specific manner. Protein levels of HSPB6, Beclin 1, and p62 are increased in the right ventricle, whereas only HSPB6 was increased in the left ventricle. Unlike the heart, samples from the triceps brachii long head showed only an increase in the protein level of p62, highlighting interesting central versus peripheral differences in autophagy regulation. In the right coronary artery, total HSPB6 protein expression was decreased and associated with an increase in LC3B-II/LC3B-I ratio, demonstrating a different mechanism of autophagy dysregulation in the coronary vasculature. Thus, contrary to our hypothesis, activation of HSPB6 was differentially regulated in a tissue-specific manner and observed in parallel with variable states of autophagy markers assessed by protein levels of LC3B, p62, and Beclin 1. Our data provide insight into how the HSPB6/ autophagy axis is regulated in a preclinical swine model with potential relevance to heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Our study shows that the activation of HSPB6 is tissue specific and associated with variable states of downstream markers of autophagy in a unique preclinical swine model of cardiometabolic HF with potential relevance to HFpEF. These findings suggest that targeted approaches could be an important consideration regarding the development of drugs aimed at this intracellular recycling process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]