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Fine-Tuning Cardiac Insulin-Like Growth Factor 1 Receptor Signaling to Promote Health and Longevity

Mahmoud Abdellatif, Viktoria Trummer-Herbst, Alexander Martin Heberle, Alina Humnig, Tobias Pendl, Sylvère Durand, Giulia Cerrato, Sebastian J. Hofer, Moydul Islam, Julia Voglhuber, José M. Ramos Pittol, Oliver Kepp, Gerald Höefler, Albrecht Schmidt, Peter P. Rainer

Circulation · 2022 · ▲ 106 citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF1) pathway is a key regulator of cellular metabolism and aging. Although its inhibition promotes longevity across species, the effect of attenuated IGF1 signaling on cardiac aging remains controversial. METHODS: We performed a lifelong study to assess cardiac health and lifespan in 2 cardiomyocyte-specific transgenic mouse models with enhanced versus reduced IGF1 receptor (IGF1R) signaling. Male mice with human IGF1R overexpression or dominant negative phosphoinositide 3-kinase mutation were examined at different life stages by echocardiography, invasive hemodynamics, and treadmill coupled to indirect calorimetry. In vitro assays included cardiac histology, mitochondrial respiration, ATP synthesis, autophagic flux, and targeted metabolome profiling, and immunoblots of key IGF1R downstream targets in mouse and human explanted failing and nonfailing hearts, as well. RESULTS: Young mice with increased IGF1R signaling exhibited superior cardiac function that progressively declined with aging in an accelerated fashion compared with wild-type animals, resulting in heart failure and a reduced lifespan. In contrast, mice with low cardiac IGF1R signaling exhibited inferior cardiac function early in life, but superior cardiac performance during aging, and increased maximum lifespan, as well. Mechanistically, the late-life detrimental effects of IGF1R activation correlated with suppressed autophagic flux and impaired oxidative phosphorylation in the heart. Low IGF1R activity consistently improved myocardial bioenergetics and function of the aging heart in an autophagy(definition)-dependent manner. In humans, failing hearts, but not those with compensated hypertrophy, displayed exaggerated IGF1R expression and signaling activity. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings indicate that the relationship between IGF1R signaling and cardiac health is not linear, but rather biphasic. Hence, pharmacological inhibitors of the IGF1 pathway, albeit unsuitable for young individuals, might be worth considering in older adults.

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1161/circulationaha.122.059863
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2026-06-16 MST

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APA
Abdellatif, M., Trummer-Herbst, V., Heberle, A.M., Humnig, A., Pendl, T., Durand, S., Cerrato, G., Hofer, S.J., Islam, M., Voglhuber, J., Pittol, J.M.R., Kepp, O., Höefler, G., Schmidt, A., Rainer, P.P., Scherr, D., Lewinski, D.V., Bisping, E., McMullen, J.R., &amp; Diwan, A. (2022). Fine-Tuning Cardiac Insulin-Like Growth Factor 1 Receptor Signaling to Promote Health and Longevity. <em>Circulation</em>. https://doi.org/10.1161/circulationaha.122.059863
Vancouver
Abdellatif M, Trummer-Herbst V, Heberle AM, Humnig A, Pendl T, Durand S, et al. Fine-Tuning Cardiac Insulin-Like Growth Factor 1 Receptor Signaling to Promote Health and Longevity. Circulation. 2022. doi:10.1161/circulationaha.122.059863.
BibTeX
@article{mahmoud2022FineTu, title = {Fine-Tuning Cardiac Insulin-Like Growth Factor 1 Receptor Signaling to Promote Health and Longevity}, author = {Mahmoud Abdellatif and Viktoria Trummer-Herbst and Alexander Martin Heberle and Alina Humnig and Tobias Pendl and Sylvère Durand and Giulia Cerrato and Sebastian J. Hofer and Moydul Islam and Julia Voglhuber and José M. Ramos Pittol and Oliver Kepp and Gerald Höefler and Albrecht Schmidt and Peter P. Rainer and Daniel Scherr and Dirk von Lewinski and Egbert Bisping and Julie R. McMullen and Abhinav Diwan and Tobias Eisenberg and Frank Madeo and Kathrin Thedieck and Guido Kroemer and Simon Sedej}, journal = {Circulation}, year = {2022}, doi = {10.1161/circulationaha.122.059863}, }

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