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Folliculin (Flcn) inactivation leads to murine cardiac hypertrophy through mTORC1 deregulation
Yukiko Hasumi, Masaya Baba, Hisashi Hasumi, Ying Huang, Martin Lang, Rachel Reindorf, Hyoung-bin Oh, Sebastiano Sciarretta, Kunio Nagashima, Diana C. Haines, Michael Schneider, Robert Adelstein, Laura S. Schmidt, Junichi Sadoshima, W. Marston Linehan
Human Molecular Genetics · 2014 · ▲ 67 citations
Abstract
Cardiac hypertrophy, an adaptive process that responds to increased wall stress, is characterized by the enlargement of cardiomyocytes and structural remodeling. It is stimulated by various growth signals, of which the mTORC1 pathway is a well-recognized source. Here, we show that loss of Flcn, a novel AMPK-mTOR(definition) interacting molecule, causes severe cardiac hypertrophy with deregulated energy homeostasis leading to dilated cardiomyopathy in mice. We found that mTORC1 activity was upregulated in Flcn-deficient hearts, and that rapamycin(definition) treatment significantly reduced heart mass and ameliorated cardiac dysfunction. Phospho-AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK)-alpha (T172) was reduced in Flcn-deficient hearts and nonresponsive to various stimulations including metformin and AICAR (5-amino-1-β-D-ribofuranosyl-imidazole-4-carboxamide). ATP levels were elevated and mitochondrial function was increased in Flcn-deficient hearts, suggesting that excess energy resulting from up-regulated mitochondrial metabolism under Flcn deficiency might attenuate AMPK activation. Expression of Ppargc1a, a central molecule for mitochondrial metabolism, was increased in Flcn-deficient hearts and indeed, inactivation of Ppargc1a in Flcn-deficient hearts significantly reduced heart mass and prolonged survival. Ppargc1a inactivation restored phospho-AMPK-alpha levels and suppressed mTORC1 activity in Flcn-deficient hearts, suggesting that up-regulated Ppargc1a confers increased mitochondrial metabolism and excess energy, leading to inactivation of AMPK and activation of mTORC1. Rapamycin treatment did not affect the heart size of Flcn/Ppargc1a doubly inactivated hearts, further supporting the idea that Ppargc1a is the critical element leading to deregulation of the AMPK-mTOR-axis and resulting in cardiac hypertrophy under Flcn deficiency. These data support an important role for Flcn in cardiac homeostasis in the murine model.
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- 10.1093/hmg/ddu286
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- 2026-06-10 MST
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APA
Hasumi, Y., Baba, M., Hasumi, H., Huang, Y., Lang, M., Reindorf, R., Oh, H., Sciarretta, S., Nagashima, K., Haines, D.C., Schneider, M., Adelstein, R., Schmidt, L.S., Sadoshima, J., & Linehan, W.M. (2014). Folliculin (Flcn) inactivation leads to murine cardiac hypertrophy through mTORC1 deregulation. <em>Human Molecular Genetics</em>. https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddu286
Vancouver
Hasumi Y, Baba M, Hasumi H, Huang Y, Lang M, Reindorf R, et al. Folliculin (Flcn) inactivation leads to murine cardiac hypertrophy through mTORC1 deregulation. Human Molecular Genetics. 2014. doi:10.1093/hmg/ddu286.
BibTeX
@article{yukiko2014Follic,
title = {Folliculin (Flcn) inactivation leads to murine cardiac hypertrophy through mTORC1 deregulation},
author = {Yukiko Hasumi and Masaya Baba and Hisashi Hasumi and Ying Huang and Martin Lang and Rachel Reindorf and Hyoung-bin Oh and Sebastiano Sciarretta and Kunio Nagashima and Diana C. Haines and Michael Schneider and Robert Adelstein and Laura S. Schmidt and Junichi Sadoshima and W. Marston Linehan},
journal = {Human Molecular Genetics},
year = {2014},
doi = {10.1093/hmg/ddu286},
}
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